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All About Our World

Tales of the Klondyke
Jack London

Page 2 of 289


On every hand stretched the forest primeval,--the home of noisy
comedy and silent tragedy.  Here the struggle for survival
continued to wage with all its ancient brutality.  Briton and
Russian were still to overlap in the Land of the Rainbow's End--
and this was the very heart of it--nor had Yankee gold yet
purchased its vast domain.  The wolf-pack still clung to the flank
of the cariboo-herd, singling out the weak and the big with calf,
and pulling them down as remorselessly as were it a thousand,
thousand generations into the past.  The sparse aborigines still
acknowledged the rule of their chiefs and medicine men, drove out
bad spirits, burned their witches, fought their neighbors, and ate
their enemies with a relish which spoke well of their bellies.
But it was at the moment when the stone age was drawing to a
close.  Already, over unknown trails and chartless wildernesses,
were the harbingers of the steel arriving,--fair-faced, blue-eyed,
indomitable men, incarnations of the unrest of their race.  By
accident or design, single-handed and in twos and threes, they
came from no one knew whither, and fought, or died, or passed on,
no one knew whence.  The priests raged against them, the chiefs

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