mile portage, which represented as many days, and this, 
by all accounts, was the easiest part of it. "Wait till you get to 
Chilcoot," others told him as they rested and talked, "where you climb 
with hands and feet." 
"They ain't going to be no Chilcoot," was his answer. "Not for me. 
Long before that I'll be at peace in my little couch beneath the moss." 
A slip, and a violent wrenching effort at recovery, frightened him. He 
felt that everything inside him had been torn asunder. 
"If ever I fall down with this on my back I'm a goner," he told another
packer. 
"That's nothing," came the answer. "Wait till you hit the Canyon. You'll 
have to cross a raging torrent on a sixty-foot pine tree. No guide ropes, 
nothing, and the water boiling at the sag of the log to your knees. If you 
fall with a pack on your back, there's no getting out of the straps. You 
just stay there and drown." 
"Sounds good to me," he retorted; and out of the depths of his 
exhaustion he almost half meant it. 
"They drown three or four a day there," the man assured him. "I helped 
fish a German out there. He had four thousand in greenbacks on him." 
"Cheerful, I must say," said Kit, battling his way to his feet and 
tottering on. 
He and the sack of beans became a perambulating tragedy. It reminded 
him of the old man of the sea who sat on Sinbad's neck. And this was 
one of those intensely masculine vacations, he meditated. Compared 
with it, the servitude to O'Hara was sweet. Again and again he was 
nearly seduced by the thought of abandoning the sack of beans in the 
brush and of sneaking around the camp to the beach and catching a 
steamer for civilization. 
But he didn't. Somewhere in him was the strain of the hard, and he 
repeated over and over to himself that what other men could do, he 
could. It became a nightmare chant, and he gibbered it to those that 
passed him on the trail. At other times, resting, he watched and envied 
the stolid, mule-footed Indians that plodded by under heavier packs. 
They never seemed to rest, but went on and on with a steadiness and 
certitude that was to him appalling. 
He sat and cursed--he had no breath for it when under way--and fought 
the temptation to sneak back to San Francisco. Before the mile pack 
was ended he ceased cursing and took to crying. The tears were tears of 
exhaustion and of disgust with self. If ever a man was a wreck, he was. 
As the end of the pack came in sight, he strained himself in desperation,
gained the camp-site, and pitched forward on his face, the beans on his 
back. It did not kill him, but he lay for fifteen minutes before he could 
summon sufficient shreds of strength to release himself from the straps. 
Then he became deathly sick, and was so found by Robbie, who had 
similar troubles of his own. It was this sickness of Robbie that braced 
him up. 
"What other men can do, we can do," Kit told him, though down in his 
heart he wondered whether or not he was bluffing. 
 
IV. 
"And I am twenty-seven years old and a man," he privately assured 
himself many times in the days that followed. There was need for it. At 
the end of a week, though he had succeeded in moving his eight 
hundred pounds forward a mile a day, he had lost fifteen pounds of his 
own weight. His face was lean and haggard. All resilience had gone out 
of his body and mind. He no longer walked, but plodded. And on the 
back-trips, travelling light, his feet dragged almost as much as when he 
was loaded. 
He had become a work animal. He fell asleep over his food, and his 
sleep was heavy and beastly, save when he was aroused, screaming 
with agony, by the cramps in his legs. Every part of him ached. He 
tramped on raw blisters, yet this was even easier than the fearful 
bruising his feet received on the water-rounded rocks of the Dyea Flats, 
across which the trail led for two miles. These two miles represented 
thirty-eight miles of travelling. He washed his face once a day. His 
nails, torn and broken and afflicted with hangnails, were never cleaned. 
His shoulders and chest, galled by the pack-straps, made him think, and 
for the first time with understanding, of the horses he had seen on city 
streets. 
One ordeal that nearly destroyed him at first had been the food. The 
extraordinary amount of work demanded extraordinary stoking, and his 
stomach was unaccustomed to great quantities of bacon and of the
coarse,    
    
		
	
	
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