Part 50 (1/2)
”Next day is Sunday!” exclaimed Ellen.
”Well, then, Monday,” said Theodora.
”But Monday we have to go home,” said Willis. ”My father told me to get back Monday and no mistake about it.”
”Well then, we shall have to make a short trip after gum and go hazel-nutting and fis.h.i.+ng all in one day,” said Addison. ”I don't see but that Tom and Willis will have to make the exploring trip up to the balm o' Gilead place to-day, if they are willing.”
”All right,” said Thomas.
”Why not make the trip this forenoon,” said Willis, ”and so come around to join you at this mountain over across where you are going for minerals.”
”That will suit me,” said Addison.
Our plans for the day were laid accordingly; and half an hour later, Addison and I, with the three girls, set off on our excursion to the mountain side; while Tom and Willis took the gun and went up the brook, in the direction of the balm o' Gilead hill.
”We shall get around where you are by noon,” said Thomas. ”You will hear us shouting for you.”
Our party of five had first to ford the brook, then make a trip of two miles or more through the forest. We took a lunch of bread and cheese, and a dipper along with us, as it was doubtful whether we should return till late in the day. The forest on the intervale between the stream and the mountain was mainly of spruce, ba.s.swood, yellow birch and a few firs. The balsam blisters on the leaden gray trunks of the latter were now plump and full, and when punctured, yielded each a few drops of balsam, as clear as crystal--the same ”Canada balsam” which microscopists make so much use for preserving their ”slides” of specimens. The French Canadians call the tree _epinette blanche_; it is very abundant in the swamps of the eastern provinces.
The yellow birches were large trees of very solid wood, displaying trunks s.h.a.ggy with curling bark and moss. Many of the ba.s.swoods, too, were very large; the trunks of these when old had furrowed bark not wholly unlike sugar maples, but rather less rugged, and more regularly grooved. The great white ash trees, too, presented similar furrowed bark, but of lighter gray tint.
The spruces which were here most numerous, varied from a foot to two feet in diameter, being such as are ordinarily cut for lumber throughout Maine and Canada. These are the trees which afford the chewing gum, sold in the larger towns and cities. Kate was not long discovering some fine great lumps of it which studded a seam in a large spruce. ”Lend me your knife, Addison,” she exclaimed. ”I want to dig some gum. Come here, girls.”
Enough was dug in a few minutes to keep our whole party chewing all that day and at intervals for many subsequent days. It is a rather bootless kind of effort, at best, though it may tend to develop the muscles of one's jaws.
In the course of an hour we reached the foot of the mountain, then began climbing up the side of it, which was quite steep and rough. Boulders of all sizes obstructed the way and we soon came to high ledges of bare gray rock which Addison declared to be mostly of granite. Through these rocks and ledges, however, there ran a great many veins of white quartz.
Some of these veins were narrow, only an inch, or a few inches, thick; but others were wider and we presently found one of lovely tinted rose quartz not less than a yard thick.
”Oh, how beautiful!” Theodora exclaimed; she and Kate sat down by it, admiring the fine rosy tint. They wished to break off pieces to carry home; but we had brought no sledge, or other stone mason's tools. By searching about at the foot of the ledge below, however, Addison found a number of rosy fragments which had broken off in the lapse of time and fallen down the hillside. Such specimens are attractive to gather up, but heavy to carry home.
The girls having grown somewhat fatigued by this time, Addison and I left them at the rose quartz ledges, and went on more rapidly, to search for other minerals. We climbed higher up the mountain side, then went back and forth for nearly an hour. At last we came to the place he was in search of, a long crevice extending up and down the rough face of a ledge which rose almost perpendicularly to a height of forty feet.
The crevice was only wide enough to thrust in one's fingers and seemed to be lined with large, hexagonal crystals, as clear as water. The points of these crystals, which had beautiful facets, jutted out past each other in many places, and seemed to match together like teeth in opposed jaws. Still higher up in the same ledges, there were scores of quartz veins, converging and crossing each other in a network; and in some of this white quartz there were minute, bright, yellow specks which Ad said was gold. He thought that there was both gold and silver in this ledge, and that if the top were blasted off, the quartz beneath would be found still richer in these precious metals;--that being the theory of mining engineers, as he had heard his father explain it.
After we had looked it over for a time, I went back to conduct the girls to the place; and with half an hour of hard climbing, they arrived at the foot of the crag.
Immediately then we discovered Addison, laboriously at work, attempting to break out fragments containing the crystals, by beating on the adjacent rock with a large stone. He had already succeeded in crus.h.i.+ng off some of the crystals; but he ruined far more of the handsome points than he secured whole.
”Oh, aren't they beautiful!” was Theodora's first exclamation. ”Do let's get a lot of them!”
”Is this what the hunters call the 'diamond ledge?'” Catherine asked.
”Yes,” replied Addison, ”but of course these crystals are only of quartz and by no means very valuable, save to put in collections of minerals.
They are nothing but quartz rock.”
”But they are very pretty,” said Kate. ”I would like to get a lot of them to set around our front doorstep.”
”If only we had drills and a hammer, with a few pounds of gunpowder, we could throw out handsome specimens!” exclaimed Addison. ”Sometime, let's get some tools and come up here. Who knows what lovely ones there may be deeper down in the crevice!”
As he was speaking, we heard a distant halloo, away to the north of us.