‘the gulf,’ as we used to call it, was
a stream which, in the dry season of the year, was
a little brook, trickling over the rocks, but which,
in the spring freshets, or when the clouds emptied
themselves on the mountain, was a wild, foaming, roaring,
and resistless torrent. In following this stream
into ‘the gulf,’ you walked on a level
plain between walls of rock, rising two or three hundred
feet on either hand, and a dozen or more rods apart,
until you came to ‘the falls,’ down which
the stream rushed with a plunge and a roar, when its
back was up, or over which, in the dry season, it
quietly rippled. These ‘falls’ were
not perpendicular, but steep as the roof of a Dutch
barn, and it was a great feat to climb them when the
stream was low. Ascending about fifty feet, you
came to a broad flat rock, large and smooth as a parlor
floor, and which in the summer season was dry.
Well, one day, in company with a boy who was visiting
me, I went up to the ‘falls,’ and we concluded
to climb the shelving rocks to the ‘table;’
and taking off our shoes and stockings, entered upon
the perilous ascent—for such to some extent
it was. Hands and feet, fingers and toes, were
all put in requisition. My friend began the ascent
before I did, and was half way up when I started.
I ought to have said, that at the foot of the ‘falls,’
was a basin, worn away by the torrent, and in which
the water, clear and cold, then stood to the depth
of three or four feet. We were toiling painfully
up, when I heard a rush above, and in an instant my
friend came like an arrow past me, sliding down the
shelving rocks on his back, or rather in a half-sitting
posture, his rear to the rocks. I won’t
undertake to say that the fire flew as he went by
me, for the rocks were slate, and therefore such a
phenomenon was not likely to occur, but the entire
absence of the seat of my friend’s pantaloons,
and the blood that trickled down to his toes, showed
that the friction was considerable. As he passed
me, I heard him exclaim, ‘thank God,’
and the next instant he plunged into the cold water
at the base of the falls. What there was to be
thankful for in such a descent over the rocks, I could
not at the time comprehend, as the chances were in
favor of a broken back, or neck, or some other consummation
equally out of the range of gratitude, in an ordinary
way. He came up out of the water blowing and snorting
like a porpoise with a cold in his head, and waded
to the shore. ‘Come down,’ he shouted,
which I did, not quite so far or fast as he did, but
fast enough to make an involuntary plunge, head foremost,
into the pool at the bottom. The occasion of
his catastrophe was this: he had ascended so
near the table rock, that his hands were upon it, and
was lifting himself up, when, as his eyes came above
the surface, the edge upon which his hands with most
of his weight rested, gave way, and he started for
the basin below. But he had a view of what satisfied
him that to this accident he owed his life, and it