登陆注册
5368200000067

第67章

In the center of the room stood a big round table over which glowed two hanging lamps.The table was littered with papers and magazines.

Home life was still further suggested by a canary bird in a gilt cage, a sleepy cat, and two pots of red geraniums.Thorpe had further imported a washerwoman who dwelt in a separate little cabin under the hill.She washed the men's belongings at twenty-five cents a week, which amount Thorpe deducted from each man's wages, whether he had the washing done or not.This encouraged cleanliness.Phil scrubbed out every day, while the men were in the woods.

Such was Thorpe's famous Camp One in the days of its splendor.Old woodsmen will still tell you about it, with a longing reminiscent glimmer in the corners of their eyes as they recall its glories and the men who worked in it.To have "put in" a winter in Camp One was the mark of a master; and the ambition of every raw recruit to the forest.Probably Thorpe's name is remembered to-day more on account of the intrepid, skillful, loyal men his strange genius gathered about it, than for the herculean feat of having carved a great fortune from the wilderness in but five years' time.

But Camp One was a privilege.A man entered it only after having proved himself; he remained in it only as long as his efficiency deserved the honor.Its members were invariably recruited from one of the other four camps; never from applicants who had not been in Thorpe's employ.A raw man was sent to Scotty, or Jack Hyland, or Radway, or Kerlie.There he was given a job, if he happened to suit, and men were needed.By and by, perhaps, when a member of Camp One fell sick or was given his time, Tim Shearer would send word to one of the other five that he needed an axman or a sawyer, or a loader, or teamster, as the case might be.The best man in the other camps was sent up.

So Shearer was foreman of a picked crew.Probably no finer body of men was ever gathered at one camp.In them one could study at his best the American pioneer.It was said at that time that you had never seen logging done as it should be until you had visited Thorpe's Camp One on the Ossawinamakee.

Of these men Thorpe demanded one thing--success.He tried never to ask of them anything he did not believe to be thoroughly possible;but he expected always that in some manner, by hook or crook, they would carry the affair through.No matter how good the excuse, it was never accepted.Accidents would happen, there as elsewhere; a way to arrive in spite of them always exists, if only a man is willing to use his wits, unflagging energy, and time.Bad luck is a reality; but much of what is called bad luck is nothing but a want of careful foresight, and Thorpe could better afford to be harsh occasionally to the genuine for the sake of eliminating the false.

If a man failed, he left Camp One.

The procedure was very simple.Thorpe never explained his reasons even to Shearer.

"Ask Tom to step in a moment," he requested of the latter.

"Tom," he said to that individual, "I think I can use you better at Four.Report to Kerlie there."And strangely enough, few even of these proud and independent men ever asked for their time, or preferred to quit rather than to work up again to the glories of their prize camp.

For while new recruits were never accepted at Camp One, neither was a man ever discharged there.He was merely transferred to one of the other foremen.

It is necessary to be thus minute in order that the reader may understand exactly the class of men Thorpe had about his immediate person.Some of them had the reputation of being the hardest citizens in three States, others were mild as turtle doves.They were all pioneers.They had the independence, the unabashed eye, the insubordination even, of the man who has drawn his intellectual and moral nourishment at the breast of a wild nature.They were afraid of nothing alive.From no one, were he chore-boy or president, would they take a single word--with the exception always of Tim Shearer and Thorpe.

The former they respected because in their picturesque guild he was a master craftsman.The latter they adored and quoted and fought for in distant saloons, because he represented to them their own ideal, what they would be if freed from the heavy gyves of vice and executive incapacity that weighed them down.

And they were loyal.It was a point of honor with them to stay "until the last dog was hung." He who deserted in the hour of need was not only a renegade, but a fool.For he thus earned a magnificent licking if ever he ran up against a member of the "Fighting Forty." A band of soldiers they were, ready to attempt anything their commander ordered, devoted, enthusiastically admiring.

And, it must be confessed, they were also somewhat on the order of a band of pirates.Marquette thought so each spring after the drive, when, hat-tilted, they surged swearing and shouting down to Denny Hogan's saloon.Denny had to buy new fixtures when they went away; but it was worth it.

Proud! it was no name for it.Boast! the fame of Camp One spread abroad over the land, and was believed in to about twenty per cent of the anecdotes detailed of it--which was near enough the actual truth.Anecdotes disbelieved, the class of men from it would have given it a reputation.The latter was varied enough, in truth.

Some people thought Camp One must be a sort of hell-hole of roaring, fighting devils.Others sighed and made rapid calculations of the number of logs they could put in, if only they could get hold of help like that.

Thorpe himself, of course, made his headquarters at Camp One.

Thence he visited at least once a week all the other camps, inspecting the minutest details, not only of the work, but of the everyday life.For this purpose he maintained a light box sleigh and pair of bays, though often, when the snow became deep, he was forced to snowshoes.

During the five years he had never crossed the Straits of Mackinaw.

同类推荐
  • THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM

    THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 芳谷集

    芳谷集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 辛丑年

    辛丑年

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说莲华面经

    佛说莲华面经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 巧冤家

    巧冤家

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 这辈子我要活得酣畅淋漓

    这辈子我要活得酣畅淋漓

    每个人在世上都只有活一次的机会,没有人能够代替他重新活一次。因此,每个人都应该活出真我本色,活得任性,活得酣畅淋漓。自然,任性而活并不是为所欲为,而是守住真我,用心去活。不管命运将我们置于何处,都要时刻心怀初始的梦想;不管曾经被撕裂的伤口有多深,我们依然要勇敢地活着、爱着。
  • 嫣梅刀

    嫣梅刀

    姓名?左茗,现在叫于欢性别?女职业? 你绝对怎么想也想不到! (巴啦啦能量,变太监!)
  • 新型合成毒品滥用实证调查与治理对策(谷臻小简·AI导读版)

    新型合成毒品滥用实证调查与治理对策(谷臻小简·AI导读版)

    本书以云南省新型合成毒品滥用问题为主要研究对象,运用社会学的调查方法,以问卷调查为主,个案深度访谈为辅,兼以参与式观察及座谈等多种方法,结合基层实战经验,对云南省新型合成毒品滥用问题产生的原因、造成的危害、滥用人群特点及发现方法等进行研究,并提出有效治理对策。
  • 不玩建村令的三国网游

    不玩建村令的三国网游

    受够了那些无脑建村流,所以……这次来点不一样的,主角不建村!未来人工智能时代,一穷二白沦落到吃软饭的江羽做了一个改变一生的决定,他要进入这款划时代的虚拟网游《魔幻》,他要出人头地,他要靠玩游戏发家致富,他要……先把自己的房租还清……"姐,再宽恕两天行不?我马上就……""少废话!别想赖账!你的游戏仓可都是姐买的!"这是一个不停吃软饭的男人的故事。ps:主角的身份谁也猜不到。
  • 残世之祖

    残世之祖

    盛世不完美。残缺的法则是天地湮灭的根源。…… 能屈能伸才是主角风范,没有实力还要硬刚是莽夫行为。弱者当隐忍。若一生碌碌无为,为家人,为自己,没有什么不可失去。但若某日变得强大,定要将失去的尊严一一找回!身怀大秘密、大使命的少年,于卑微中崛起,与天道同行,创造更完美的世界。本书主角配角智商在线,情节和世界设定严谨丰满。 书的前期借鉴传统废材流,但有一定的区别,本书慢热,专注于前期挖坑。 为了使世界更丰满、更真实,我在前面几章多费了一些笔墨,大概三四章的样子,过了这几章将会十分精彩有趣。 书友群: 612952238
  • 希望日志

    希望日志

    我是生活在慧光星的一个普通的智慧生命。我们称自己为“人类”。在这里,我每天努力工作,认真生活。可有些人说我是疯子。我不是,我没疯……
  • 扶君上相

    扶君上相

    养夫甜文:???????“你,你做什么?”????????何南枝瞪大双眼,看着这个高她整整一个头的俊美男子,含糊不清道。????????见她一副缩头缩脑的模样,江丞相勾唇,撑住她耳后的墙,头愈加凑近,温热的呼吸喷洒在她脸颊。???????“不做什么,亲你一下。”???????……???????那年阴差阳错过继在她门下的瘦弱男孩,一朝成了权倾朝野的丞相爷,还扬言娶她为妻,许她一生一世一双人。??????何南枝只觉自己引狼入室,早早被这头孤狼盯上了…… 男主前期乖巧,后期强势反扑。本书高甜,但没有高脂,仙女们可以放心食用!
  • 游戏入侵诸天

    游戏入侵诸天

    诸天万界之神方恒临终前手握一颗繁星,嘿然笑道:“吾将毕生所学注入其中,得此物者继承吾之神位,也不知道会便宜哪个幸运的家伙。”......“老子终于不用再做这个无聊透顶的神啦!”
  • 花开一季,暖到落泪:最美人间四月天

    花开一季,暖到落泪:最美人间四月天

    《花开一季,暖到落泪:最美人间四月天》是林徽因成名作、代表作和经典作璀璨荟萃,收录了林徽因迄今所有的名篇,如《你是人间的四月天》《那一晚》《一片阳光》《彼此》等,是迄今为止最经典、最唯美、最值得收藏的林徽因读本!在书中,林徽因诗意解读了爱情、亲情和友情,分享了她对成长有关的人生感悟,要“在安静中不慌不忙的坚强”。
  • 潇云楼

    潇云楼

    东皇太一:世间之事,皆有因果。张若尘:所有杀戮,只因逼上绝路。潇云:禁术重生,重探前尘恩怨。饶丹:所犯之事,全因削除神籍。赫清风:坠魔,只为救一人。樾珏:初出于世,心系一人。