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Mrs. Gregory’s Diamonds

by Mary Kyle Dallas


A Letter From The Mines Of California

Madam,

I am a miner. I have been one for years, and I have not made my fortune yet. Still, I am better off than many: better off by far than the poor fellow who died here last night. For a year or two I have often met him, unkempt and scarcely clad, wandering about, seeming to care for nothing. They say he might have been rich, that luck followed him—(we miners are apt to be superstitious)—and that he could pick nuggets up where others toiled in vain for days. But he gave or threw them away, only keeping so much as would buy food. Lodging he had none, save in the open air. He would talk with none and dwell with none, and we thought him mad. But after his death, I found a manuscript in his bosom, which I send to you. It seems to be his own story. We felt so sure of it, that one of our fellows, a carver by trade, has cut the name Frank Forrest on the board above his grave. We read this the night after his funeral, at our camp fire. Perhaps some others might also like to do so. If you think so, here it is; if not, there is no harm done.

And I am very truly yours,

A Miner


The Manuscript

George Gregory, Attorney-at-law, was on the sign over the door, and everyone always called my employer George Gregory, because there were seven brothers of the name, all in the law. I was Frank Forrest, aged twenty-two, and I was articled clerk to Mr. George Gregory. He was the best friend I ever had, and the best husband and father I ever knew. At home he had a good, merry little wife, and a dozen children so near of an age and so exactly alike that… Read More