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CHAPTER XVII OUR FOURTH OF JULY AT THE
DEN FARM work
as usual occupied us quite
closely during May and June that year; and ere long we began to think
of what
we would do on the approaching Fourth of July. So far as we could hear,
no
public celebration was being planned either at the village in our own
town, or
in any of the towns immediately adjoining. Apparently we would have to
organize
our own celebration, if we had one; and after talking the matter over
with the
other young folks of the school district, we decided to celebrate the
day by
making a picnic excursion to the "Den," and carrying out a long
contemplated plan for exploring it. The Den
was a pokerish cavern near
Overset Pond, nine or ten miles to the northeast of the old Squire's
place,
about which clung many legends. In the
spring of 1839 a large female
panther is said to have been trapped there, and an end made of her
young
family. Several bears, too, had been surprised inside the Den, for the
place
presented great attractions as a secure retreat from winter cold. But
the story
that most interested us was a tradition that somewhere in the recesses
of the
cave the notorious Androscoggin Indian Adwanko had hidden a bag of
silver money
that he had received from the French for the scalps of white settlers. The
entrance to the cave fronts the
pond near the foot of a precipitous mountain, called the Fall-off. A
wilder
locality, or one of more sinister aspect, can hardly be imagined. The
cave is
not spacious within; it is merely a dark hole among great granite
rocks. By
means of a lantern or torch you can penetrate to a distance of seventy
feet or
more. One day
when three of us boys had
gone to Overset Pond to fish for trout we plucked up our courage and
crawled
into it. We crept along for what seemed to us a great distance till we
found
the passage obstructed by a rock that had apparently fallen from
overhead. We
could move the stone a little, but we did not dare to tamper with it
much, for
fear that other stones from above would fall.' We believed that
Adwanko's bag
of silver was surely in some recess beyond the rock and at once began
to lay
plans for blasting out the stone with powder. By using a long fuse, the
person
that fired the charge would have time to get out before the explosion. Our party
drove there in five
double-seated wagons as far as Moose-Yard Brook, where we left the
teams and
walked the remaining two miles through the woods to Overset Pond.
Besides five
of us from the old Squire's, there were our two young neighbors, Thomas
and
Catherine Edwards, Willis Murch and his older brother, Ben, the two
Darnley
boys, Newman and Rufus, their sister, Adriana, and ten or twelve other
young
people. Besides
luncheon baskets and
materials to make lemonade, we had taken along axes, two crowbars, two
lanterns, four pounds of blasting powder and three feet of safety fuse.
My
cousin Addison had also brought a hammer, drill and "spoon." The
girls were chiefly interested in the picnic; but we boys were resolved
to see
what was in the depths of the cave, and immediately on reaching the
place
several of us lighted the lanterns and went in. At no
place could we stand upright.
Apparently some animal had wintered there, for the interior had a rank
odor;
but we crawled on over rocks until we came to the obstructing stone
sixty or
seventy feet from the entrance. We had
planned to drill a hole in
the rock, blast it into pieces, and thus clear a passage to what lay
beyond it.
On closer inspection, however, we found that it was almost impossible
to set
the drill and deal blows with the hammer. But the stone rested on
another rock,
and we believed that we could push powder in beneath it and so get an
upward
blast that would heave the stone either forward or backward, or perhaps
even
break it in halves. We therefore set to work, thrusting the powder far
under
the stone with a blunt stick, until we had a charge of about four
pounds. When
we had connected the fuse we heaped sand about the base of the stone,
to
confine the powder. The blast
was finally ready; and
then the question who should fire it arose. The three feet of fuse
would, we
believed, give two full minutes for whoever lighted it to get out of
the Den;
but fuse sometimes burns faster than is expected, and the safety fuse
made in
those days was not so uniform in quality as that of present times. At
first no
one seemed greatly to desire the honor of touching it off. The boys
stood and
joked one another about it, while the girls looked on from a safe
distance. "I shan't
feel offended if any
one gets ahead of me," Addison remarked carelessly. "I'd just
as soon have some one
else do it," Ben said, smiling. I had no
idea of claiming the honor
myself. Finally, after more bantering, Rufus Darnley cried, "Who's
afraid?
I'll light it. Two minutes is time enough to get out." Rufus was
not largely endowed with
mother wit, or prudence. His brother Newman and his sister Adriana did
not like
the idea of his setting off the blast — in fact, none of us did; but
Rufus
wanted to show off a bit, and he insisted upon going in. Thereupon Ben,
the
oldest of the young fellows present, said quietly that he would go in
with
Rufus and light the fuse himself while Rufus held the lantern. "I'll
shout when I touch the
match to the fuse," he said, "so that you can get away from the mouth
of the cave." They crept
in, and the rest of us
stood round, listening for the signal. Several minutes passed, and we
wondered
what could be taking them so long. At last there came a muffled shout,
and all
of us, retreating twenty or thirty yards, watched for Ben and Rufus to
emerge.
Some of us were counting off the seconds. We could hear Ben and Rufus
coming,
climbing over the rocks. Then suddenly there was an outcry and the
sound of
tinkling glass. At the same instant Ben emerged, but immediately turned
and
went back into the cave. "Hurry,
Rufe!" we heard
him call out. "What's the matter? Hurry, or it will go off!" Consternation
fell on us, and some
of us started for the mouth of the cave; but before we had gone more
than five
paces Ben sprang forth. He had not dared to remain an instant longer —
and,
indeed, he was scarcely outside when the explosion came. It sounded
like a
heavy jolt deep inside the mountain. To our
horror a huge slab of rock,
thirty or forty feet up the side of the Fall-off, started to slide with
a great
crunching and grinding; then, gathering momentum, it plunged down
between us
and the mouth of the cave and completely shut the opening from view.
Powder
smoke floated up from behind the slab. There was
something so terrible in
the suddenness of the catastrophe that the whole party seemed crazed.
The boys,
shouting wildly, swarmed about the fallen rock; the girls ran round,
imploring
us to get Rufus out. Rufus's sister Adriana, beside herself with
terror, was
screaming; and we could hardly keep Newman Darnley from attacking Ben
Murch,
who, he declared, should have brought Rufus out! At first
we were afraid that the
explosion had killed Rufus; but almost immediately we heard muffled
cries for
help from the cave. He was still alive, but we had no way of knowing
how badly
he was hurt. Adriana fairly flew from one to another, beseeching us to
save
him. "He's
dying! He's under the
rocks!" she screamed. "Oh, why don't you get him out?" With grave
faces Willis, Ben,
Addison and Thomas peered round the fallen rock and cast about for some
means
of moving it. "We must
pry it away!"
Thomas exclaimed. "Let's get a big pry!" "We can't
move that rock!"
Ben declared. "We shall have to drill it and blast it." But we had
used all the powder and
fuse, and it would take several hours to get more. Ben insisted,
however, on
sending Alfred Batchelder for the powder, and then, seizing the hammer
and
drill, he began to drill a hole in the side of the rock. Thomas,
however, still believed that
we could move the rock by throwing our united weight on a long pry; and
many of
the boys agreed with him. We felled a spruce tree seven inches in
diameter,
trimmed it and cut a pry twenty feet long from it. Carrying it to the
rock, we
set a stone for a fulcrum, and then threw our weight repeatedly on the
long
end. The rock, which must have weighed ten tons or more, scarcely
stirred. Ben
laughed at us scornfully and went on drilling. All the
while Adriana stood weeping,
and the other girls were shedding tears in sympathy. Rufus's distressed
cries
came to our ears, entreating us to help him and saying something that
we could
not understand about his leg. As Addison
stood racking his brain
for some quicker way of moving the rock he remembered a contrivance,
called a
"giant purchase," that he had heard of lumbermen's using to break
jams of logs on the Androscoggin River. He had never seen one and had
only the
vaguest idea how it worked. All he knew was that it consisted of an
immense
lever, forty feet long, laid on a log support and hauled laterally to
and fro
by horses. He knew that you could thus get a titanic application of
power, for
if the long arm of the lever were forty feet long and the short arm
four feet,
the strength of three horses pulling on the long arm would be increased
tenfold
— that is, the power of thirty horses would be applied against the
object to be
moved. Addison
explained his plan to the
rest of us. He sent Thomas and me to lead several of our horses up
through the
woods to the pond. We ran all the way; and we took the whippletrees off
the
double wagons, and brought all the spare rope halters. Within an hour
we were
back there with four of the strongest horses. Meanwhile
the others had been busy;
even Ben had been persuaded to drop his drilling and to help the other
boys cut
the great lever — a straight spruce tree forty or forty-five feet tall.
The
girls, too, had worked; they had even helped us drag the two spruce
logs for
the lever to slide on. In fact, every one had worked with might and
main in a
kind of breathless anxiety, for Rufus's very life seemed to be hanging
on the
success of our exertions. A few feet
to the left of the fallen
rock was another boulder that served admirably for a fulcrum, and
before long
we had the big lever in place with the end of the short arm bearing
against the
fallen slab. When we had attached the horses to the farther end,
Addison gave
the word to start. As the horses gathered themselves for the pull we
watched
anxiously. The great log lever, which was more than a foot in diameter,
bent
visibly as they lunged forward. Every eye
was now on the rock, and
when it moved, — for move it did, —
such a cry of joy rose as the shores of that little pond had never
echoed
before! The great slab ground heavily against the other rocks, but
moved for
three or four feet, exposing in part the mouth of the cave — the same
little
dark chink that affords entrance to the Den to-day. Other
boulders prevented the rock
from moving farther, and, although the horses surged at the lever, and
we boys
added our strength, the slab stuck fast; but an aperture twenty inches
wide had
been uncovered, wide enough to enable any one to enter the Den. Ben,
Willis and Edgar Wilbur crept
in, followed by Thomas with a lantern; and after a time they brought
Rufus out.
We learned then that in his haste after the fuse was lighted he had
fallen over
one of the large rocks and, striking his leg on another stone, had
broken the
bone above the knee. He suffered not a little when the boys were
drawing him
out at the narrow chink beside the rock; but he was alive, and that was
a
matter for thankfulness. Thomas
went back to get the lantern
that Rufus had dropped. It had fallen into a crevice between two large
rocks,
and while searching for it Thomas found another lantern there, of
antique
pattern. It was made of tin and was perforated with holes to emit the
light; it
seemed very old. Underneath where it lay Thomas also discovered a man's
waistcoat, caked and sodden by the damp. In one pocket was a pipe, a
rusted
jackknife and what had once been a piece of tobacco. In the other
pocket were
sixteen large, old, red copper cents, one of which was a "boobyhead"
cent. We never
discovered to whom that
treasure-trove belonged. It could hardly have been Adwanko's, for one
of the
copper cents bore the date of 1830. Perhaps the owner of it had been
searching
for Adwanko's money; but why he left his lantern and waistcoat behind
him
remains a mystery. Our chief care was now for Rufus. We made a litter
of poles
and spruce boughs, and as gently as we could carried the sufferer
through the
woods down to the wagons, and slowly drove him home. Seven or eight
weeks
passed before he was able to walk again, even with the aid of a crutch.
Our plan
of exploring the Den had
been wholly overshadowed. We even forgot the luncheon baskets; and no
one
thought of ascertaining what the blast had accomplished. When we went
up to the
cave some months later we found that the blast had done very little; it
had
moved the rock slightly, but not enough to open the passage; and so it
remains
to this day. Old Adwanko's scalp money is still there — if it ever was
there;
but it is my surmise that the cruel redskin is much more likely to have
spent
his blood money for rum than to have left it behind him in the Den. |