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    Chapter LX

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    By and by, an old friend of mine, a miner, came down from one of the
    decayed mining camps of Tuolumne, California, and I went back with him.
    We lived in a small cabin on a verdant hillside, and there were not five
    other cabins in view over the wide expanse of hill and forest. Yet a
    flourishing city of two or three thousand population had occupied this
    grassy dead solitude during the flush times of twelve or fifteen years
    before, and where our cabin stood had once been the heart of the teeming
    hive, the centre of the city. When the mines gave out the town fell into
    decay, and in a few years wholly disappeared--streets, dwellings, shops,
    everything--and left no sign. The grassy slopes were as green and smooth
    and desolate of life as if they had never been disturbed. The mere
    handful of miners still remaining, had seen the town spring up spread,
    grow and flourish in its pride; and they had seen it sicken and die, and
    pass away like a dream. With it their hopes had died, and their zest of
    life. They had long ago resigned themselves to their exile, and ceased
    to correspond with their distant friends or turn longing eyes toward
    their early homes. They had accepted banishment, forgotten the world and
    been forgotten of the world. They were far from telegraphs and
    railroads, and they stood, as it were, in a living grave, dead to the
    events that stirred the globe's great populations, dead to the common
    interests of men, isolated and outcast from brotherhood with their kind.
    It was the most singular, and almost the most touching and melancholy
    exile that fancy can imagine.--One of my associates in this locality, for
    two or three months, was a man who had had a university education; but
    now for eighteen years he had decayed there by inches, a bearded, rough-
    clad, clay-stained miner, and at times, among his sighings and
    soliloquizings, he unconsciously interjected vaguely remembered Latin and
    Greek sentences--dead and musty tongues, meet vehicles for the thoughts
    of one whose dreams were all of the past, whose life was a failure; a
    tired man, burdened with the present, and indifferent to the future; a
    man without ties, hopes, interests, waiting for rest and the end.

    In that one little corner of California is found a species of mining

    which is seldom or never mentioned in print. It is called "pocket
    mining" and I am not aware that any of it is done outside of that little
    corner. The gold is not evenly distributed through the surface dirt, as
    in ordinary placer mines, but is collected in little spots, and they are
    very wide apart and exceedingly hard to find, but when you do find one
    you reap a rich and sudden harvest. There are not now more than twenty
    pocket miners in that entire little region. I think I know every one of
    them personally. I have known one of
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