Sketches New and Old


google search for Sketches New and Old

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
300 301 302 303 304

Quick Jump
1 101 201 302 402

a seriousness that I ought to have been ashamed to assume, I stated that  
as soon as Mr.----heard the news he summoned a jury, mounted his mule,  
and posted off, with noble reverence for official duty, on that awful  
five days' journey, through alkali, sage brush, peril of body, and  
imminent starvation, to hold an inquest on this man that had been dead  
and turned to everlasting stone for more than three hundred years!  
And then, my hand being "in," so to speak, I went on, with the same  
unflinching gravity, to state that the jury returned a verdict that  
deceased came to his death from protracted exposure. This only moved me  
to higher flights of imagination, and I said that the jury, with that  
charity so characteristic of pioneers, then dug a grave, and were about  
to give the petrified man Christian burial, when they found that for ages  
a limestone sediment had been trickling down the face of the stone  
against which he was sitting, and this stuff had run under him and  
cemented him fast to the "bed-rock"; that the jury (they were all  
silver-miners) canvassed the difficulty a moment, and then got out their  
powder and fuse, and proceeded to drill a hole under him, in order to  
blast him from his position, when Mr.----, "with that delicacy so  
characteristic of him, forbade them, observing that it would be little  
less than sacrilege to do such a thing."  
From beginning to end the "Petrified Man" squib was a string of roaring  
absurdities, albeit they were told with an unfair pretense of truth that  
even imposed upon me to some extent, and I was in some danger of  
believing in my own fraud. But I really had no desire to deceive  
anybody, and no expectation of doing it. I depended on the way the  
302  


Page
300 301 302 303 304

Quick Jump
1 101 201 302 402