GSolutions eBooks Burning Daylight by Jack London

Burning Daylight by Jack London


In all lands where life is a hazard lightly played with and lightly flung aside, men turn, almost automatically, to gambling for diversion and relaxation. 

 

In the Yukon men gambled their lives for gold, and those that won gold from the ground gambled for it with one another.  Nor was Elam Harnish an exception.  He was a man's man primarily, and the instinct in him to play the game of life was strong. 

 

 

Environment had determined what form that game should take.  He was born on an Iowa farm, and his father had emigrated to eastern Oregon, in which mining country Elam's boyhood was lived.  He had known nothing but hard knocks for big stakes. 

 

 

Pluck and endurance counted in the game, but the great god Chance dealt the cards.  Honest work for sure but meagre returns did not count.  A man played big.  He risked everything for everything, and anything less than everything meant that he was a loser. 

 

 

So for twelve Yukon years, Elam Harnish had been a loser.  True, on Moosehide Creek the past summer he had taken out twenty thousand dollars, and what was left in the ground was twenty thousand more.  But, as he himself proclaimed, that was no more than getting his ante back.  He had ante'd his life for a dozen years, and forty thousand was a small pot for such a stake–the price of a drink and a dance at the Tivoli, of a winter's flutter at Circle City, and a grubstake for the year to come.

 

 

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