CHAPTER XX.WANDERING IN THE WILDS—AMONG THE MILES OF MOUNTAINS—BENEATH A SUMMER SKY.
WANDERING IN THE WILDS—AMONG THE MILES OF MOUNTAINS—BENEATH A SUMMER SKY.
AWAY in the hills, far above the bluebells, where the day dawned early and the sunlight lingered when the day was done, the lone prospector had his home. At times he would have a prospecting partner; but often for months he lived alone in the hills, with no companion save his faithful dog, who for thirteen years followed silently where his master led. One day while talking of his past experiences, the prospector said: “When I try to taste again the joy that was mine when I first learned that I was a millionaire, I am disappointed. Like Mark Twain’s dime, it could be enjoyed but once.Great joys, like great sorrows, are soon forgotten; but there are things that are as fresh in my memory as if these years had been but moments. I shall never forget the many beautiful spots where my little dog and I have camped—always on the sunny south hills where the sun coaxed the grass to grow and the flowers to blow, often, it seemed, amonth ahead of time. When we had made our camp, sometimes we would go away for a day or two, and upon our return, we would find the little wild flowers blooming by our door. Often, now, when we have finished our midday dinner of porterhouse and pie, I sit on the stoop in the sunlight, my faithful dog at my feet, and as I smoke a fifty-cent cigar, my mind wanders back over memory’s trail.”
I sit on the stoop in the sunlight
I hear the song of brooklets,The murmurings of the winds;I smell the smell of summer,Hear the whispering of the pines.I seem to see the sunset;In fancy I beholdThe hoary hills above me,Robed in a garb of gold.I give an extra cookieTo this dear old dog of mine;As he shared the shadow,So shall he share the shine.And as I smoke and lose me,In the days that have gone by,Among the miles of mountainsBeneath a summer sky,The smoke of my Havanna,As it slowly floats away,Is freighted with the odorOf my long-lost pipe of clay.And I give an extra cookieTo this poor old dog of mine;For he has shared the shadow,And he shall share the shine.
I hear the song of brooklets,The murmurings of the winds;I smell the smell of summer,Hear the whispering of the pines.I seem to see the sunset;In fancy I beholdThe hoary hills above me,Robed in a garb of gold.I give an extra cookieTo this dear old dog of mine;As he shared the shadow,So shall he share the shine.And as I smoke and lose me,In the days that have gone by,Among the miles of mountainsBeneath a summer sky,The smoke of my Havanna,As it slowly floats away,Is freighted with the odorOf my long-lost pipe of clay.And I give an extra cookieTo this poor old dog of mine;For he has shared the shadow,And he shall share the shine.
I hear the song of brooklets,The murmurings of the winds;I smell the smell of summer,Hear the whispering of the pines.
I hear the song of brooklets,
The murmurings of the winds;
I smell the smell of summer,
Hear the whispering of the pines.
I seem to see the sunset;In fancy I beholdThe hoary hills above me,Robed in a garb of gold.
I seem to see the sunset;
In fancy I behold
The hoary hills above me,
Robed in a garb of gold.
I give an extra cookieTo this dear old dog of mine;As he shared the shadow,So shall he share the shine.
I give an extra cookie
To this dear old dog of mine;
As he shared the shadow,
So shall he share the shine.
And as I smoke and lose me,In the days that have gone by,Among the miles of mountainsBeneath a summer sky,
And as I smoke and lose me,
In the days that have gone by,
Among the miles of mountains
Beneath a summer sky,
The smoke of my Havanna,As it slowly floats away,Is freighted with the odorOf my long-lost pipe of clay.
The smoke of my Havanna,
As it slowly floats away,
Is freighted with the odor
Of my long-lost pipe of clay.
And I give an extra cookieTo this poor old dog of mine;For he has shared the shadow,And he shall share the shine.
And I give an extra cookie
To this poor old dog of mine;
For he has shared the shadow,
And he shall share the shine.