Jack London Fullscreen Time-not-waits (1910)

Pause

"You-all just wait till the news of this strike reaches the Outside," he told his old-timer cronies in the Moosehorn Saloon.

"The news won't get out till next spring.

Then there's going to be three rushes.

A summer rush of men coming in light; a fall rush of men with outfits; and a spring rush, the next year after that, of fifty thousand.

You-all won't be able to see the landscape for chechaquos.

Well, there's the summer and fall rush of 1897 to commence with.

What are you-all going to do about it?"

"What are you going to do about it?" a friend demanded.

"Nothing," he answered.

"I've sure already done it.

I've got a dozen gangs strung out up the Yukon getting out logs.

You-all'll see their rafts coming down after the river breaks.

Cabins!

They sure will be worth what a man can pay for them next fall.

Lumber!

It will sure go to top-notch. I've got two sawmills freighting in over the passes.

They'll come down as soon as the lakes open up.

And if you-all are thinking of needing lumber, I'll make you-all contracts right now—three hundred dollars a thousand, undressed."

Corner lots in desirable locations sold that winter for from ten to thirty thousand dollars.

Daylight sent word out over the trails and passes for the newcomers to bring down log-rafts, and, as a result, the summer of 1897 saw his sawmills working day and night, on three shifts, and still he had logs left over with which to build cabins.

These cabins, land included, sold at from one to several thousand dollars. Two-story log buildings, in the business part of town, brought him from forty to fifty thousand dollars apiece.

These fresh accretions of capital were immediately invested in other ventures.

He turned gold over and over, until everything that he touched seemed to turn to gold.

But that first wild winter of Carmack's strike taught Daylight many things.

Despite the prodigality of his nature, he had poise.

He watched the lavish waste of the mushroom millionaires, and failed quite to understand it.

According to his nature and outlook, it was all very well to toss an ante away in a night's frolic. That was what he had done the night of the poker-game in Circle City when he lost fifty thousand—all that he possessed.

But he had looked on that fifty thousand as a mere ante.

When it came to millions, it was different.

Such a fortune was a stake, and was not to be sown on bar-room floors, literally sown, flung broadcast out of the moosehide sacks by drunken millionaires who had lost all sense of proportion.

There was McMann, who ran up a single bar-room bill of thirty-eight thousand dollars; and Jimmie the Rough, who spent one hundred thousand a month for four months in riotous living, and then fell down drunk in the snow one March night and was frozen to death; and Swiftwater Bill, who, after spending three valuable claims in an extravagance of debauchery, borrowed three thousand dollars with which to leave the country, and who, out of this sum, because the lady-love that had jilted him liked eggs, cornered the one hundred and ten dozen eggs on the Dawson market, paying twenty-four dollars a dozen for them and promptly feeding them to the wolf-dogs.

Champagne sold at from forty to fifty dollars a quart, and canned oyster stew at fifteen dollars.

Daylight indulged in no such luxuries.

He did not mind treating a bar-room of men to whiskey at fifty cents a drink, but there was somewhere in his own extravagant nature a sense of fitness and arithmetic that revolted against paying fifteen dollars for the contents of an oyster can.

On the other hand, he possibly spent more money in relieving hard-luck cases than did the wildest of the new millionaires on insane debauchery.

Father Judge, of the hospital, could have told of far more important donations than that first ten sacks of flour.

And old-timers who came to Daylight invariably went away relieved according to their need.

But fifty dollars for a quart of fizzy champagne!

That was appalling.

And yet he still, on occasion, made one of his old-time hell-roaring nights.

But he did so for different reasons.

First, it was expected of him because it had been his way in the old days.

And second, he could afford it.

But he no longer cared quite so much for that form of diversion.

He had developed, in a new way, the taste for power. It had become a lust with him.

By far the wealthiest miner in Alaska, he wanted to be still wealthier.

It was a big game he was playing in, and he liked it better than any other game.

In a way, the part he played was creative.

He was doing something.

And at no time, striking another chord of his nature, could he take the joy in a million-dollar Eldorado dump that was at all equivalent to the joy he took in watching his two sawmills working and the big down river log-rafts swinging into the bank in the big eddy just above Moosehide Mountain.