Now, the Special English program, AMERICAN STORIES.(MUSIC)
Our story today is called, "The Luck of Roaring Camp." It was written by Bret Harte. Here is Harry Monroe with our story.
(MUSIC)
STORYTELLER:
Roaring Camp was the noisiest gold mining town in
California. More than one-hundred men
from every part of the United States had come to that little camp – stopping
there for a short time on their way to getting rich.
Many
of these gold miners were criminals. All
of them were violent. They filled the
peaceful mountain air with shouting and gun shots. The noise of their continual fighting finally
gave the camp its strange name.
On
a sunny morning in eighteen fifty, however, the men of Roaring Camp were
quiet. A crowd was gathered in front of
a small wooden house by the river.
Inside that cabin was "Cherokee Sal," the only woman in camp. She was all alone and in terrible pain. Cherokee Sal was having a baby.
Deaths were not unusual in Roaring Camp. But a birth was big news.
One of the men turned to another and ordered: "Go in
there, Stumpy, and see what you can do."
Stumpy opened the cabin door, and disappeared inside. The rest of the men built a campfire outside
and gathered around it to wait.
Suddenly,
a sharp cry broke the air…the cry of a new-born baby. All the men jumped to their feet as Stumpy
appeared at the cabin door. Cherokee Sal
was dead. But her baby, a boy, was
alive.
The
men formed a long line. One by one they
entered the tiny cabin. On the bed,
under a blanket, they could see the body of the unlucky mother. On a pine table, near that bed, was a small
wooden box. Inside lay Roaring Camp's
newest citizen, wrapped in a piece of bright red cloth.
Someone
had put a large hat near the baby's box.
And as the men slowly marched past, they dropped gifts into the
hat. A gold tobacco box. A silver gun.
A diamond ring. A lace
handkerchief. And about two hundred
dollars in gold and silver.
Only one incident broke the flow of the men through the
cabin. As a gambler named Kentucky
leaned over the box, the baby reached up and held one of the man's
fingers. Kentucky looked embarrassed.
"That funny little fellow," he said, as he gently
pulled his hand out of the box. He held
up his finger and stared at it. "He
grabbed my finger," he told the men.
"That funny little fellow."
The
next morning, the men of Roaring Camp buried Cherokee Sal. Afterwards, they held a formal meeting to
discuss what to do with the baby.
Everyone in the camp voted to keep the child. But nobody could agree on the best way to
take care of it.
Tom
Ryder suggested bringing a woman into the camp to care for the baby. But the men believed no good woman would
accept Roaring Camp as her home. And
they decided that they didn't want any more of the other kind.
Stumpy didn't say a word during these
long discussions. But when the others
finally asked his opinion, he admitted that he wanted to continue taking care
of the baby himself. He had been feeding
it milk from a donkey, and he believed he could raise the baby just fine.
There
was something original, independent, even heroic about Stumpy's plan that
pleased the men of Roaring Camp. Stumpy
was hired.
All
the men gave him some gold to send for baby things from the city of
Sacramento. They wanted the best that
money could buy.
By
the time the baby was a month old, the men decided he needed a name. All of them had noticed that since the baby's
birth, they were finding more gold than ever before. One day Oakhurst declared that the baby had
brought "The Luck" to Roaring Camp. So
"Luck" was the name they chose for him, adding before it, the first name
"Tommy."
A
name day was set for him. The ceremony
was held under the pine trees with Stumpy saying the simple works: "I proclaim
you Thomas Luck, according to the laws of the United States and the state of
California, so help me God."
Soon after
the ceremony, Roaring Camp began to change.
The first improvements were made in the cabin of Tommy or "The Luck" as
he was usually called. The men painted
it white, planted flowers around it and kept it clean.
Tuttle's
store, where the men used to meet to talk and play cards, also changed. The owner imported a carpet and some
mirrors. The men – seeing themselves in
Tuttle's mirrors – began to take more care about their hair, beards and
clothing.
Stumpy
made a new law for the camp. Anyone who
wanted the honor of holding The Luck would have to wash daily. Kentuck appeared at the cabin every afternoon
in a clean shirt, his face still shining from the washing he'd given it.
The
shouting and yelling that had given the camp its name also stopped. Tommy needed his sleep, and the men walked
around speaking in whispers. Instead of
angry shouts, the music of gentle songs filled the air. Strange new feelings of peace and happiness
came into the hearts of the miners of Roaring Camp.
During
those long summer days, The Luck was carried up the mountain to the place where
the men were digging for gold. He would
lie on a soft blanket decorated with wild flowers the men would bring.
Nature
was his nurse and playmate. Birds flew
around his blanket. And little animals
would play nearby. Golden sunshine and
soft breezes would stroke him to sleep.
During that golden summer The Luck was
with them, the men of Roaring Camp all became rich. With the gold they found in the mountains
came a desire for further improvement.
The men voted to build a hotel the following spring. They hoped some good families with children
would come to live in Roaring Camp.
But
some of the men were against this plan.
They hoped something would happen to prevent it. And something did.
The
following winter, the winter of eighteen fifty-one, is still remembered for the
heavy snows in the mountains. When the
snow melted that spring, every stream became an angry river that raced down the
mountains tearing up trees and bringing destruction.
One
of those terrible streams was the North Fork River. Late one night, it leaped over its banks and
raced into the valley of Roaring Camp.
The
sleeping men had no chance to escape the rushing water, the crashing trees and
the darkness. When morning came,
Stumpy's cabin near the river was gone.
Further down in the valley they found the body of its unlucky owner.
But the pride, the hope, the joy, The Luck of Roaring
Camp had disappeared.
Suddenly,
a boat appeared from around a bend in the river. The men in it said they had picked up a man
and a baby. Did anyone know them? Did they belong here?
Lying
on the bottom of the rescue boat was Kentuck.
He was seriously injured, but still holding The Luck of Roaring Camp in
his arms. As they bent over the two, the
men saw the child was pale and cold.
"He's
dead," said one of them.
Kentuck
opened his eyes. "Dead?" he whispered. "Yes, Kentuck. And you are dying, too."
Kentuck
smiled. "Dying!" he repeated. "He is taking me with him. Tell the boys I've got The Luck with me."
And
the strong man, still holding the small child, drifted away on the shadowy
river that flows forever to the unknown sea.
(MUSIC)
ANNOUNCER:
You have just heard "The Luck of Roaring Camp," a story
by Bret Harte. It was adapted for
Special English by Dona De Sanctis. Your
storyteller was Harry Monroe.
Listen
again next week for another American story told in Special English. This is Shirley Griffith.