It’s as if Merington conceived her story as a farce meant
for the stage but wrote it as a novel instead. The scenes unfold as comic
drama, with a cast of characters and action that is chiefly dialogue. As a book
or a play, it works either way and is laugh-out-loud funny.
Plot. The setting is
a mining camp in the Klondike called Lost Shoe Creek. The central character is
Sgt. Scarlett of the NWMP, whose assignment out here in the gold fields is to track
a band of thieves who are headquartered across the border in the U.S. and
operating in Canada. His job is also to prevent the sale and consumption of
alcohol, both of which are prohibited in the Canadian territories.
The camp is infested with questionable characters. Among
them is a blackguard, Blenksoe, and Nick Bully, a ruffian who lives up to his
name. During the novel Bully is extradited to the U.S. for shooting a deputy
U.S. marshal.
Sgt. Scarlett |
Bully has a daughter Gelly of marriageable age, whose sometime
boyfriend is Dandy Raish, a scheming claim jumper. Blenksoe and Dandy keep
their eye on a prospector Lucky Durant, a man who has made and lost fortunes
and, though he is currently broke, can strike it rich again.
A minister, Maclane, works diligently to save souls among
the miners, and mostly for local color there’s Gumboot Annie, a brassy saloon
owner. An Indian trader named Chilcat Jo whittles miniature totem poles and has
his own aspirations to take Gelly for his wife.
Bursting into camp comes Lucky’s daughter Evelyn and an
entourage of man-hungry single women she calls her Orphans. Evelyn, an
American, has lived all her life wanting for nothing, sent to the best private
schools, all paid for by her father. She has come to visit him, whom she expects
to find living in luxury.
Not wanting to be found penniless, Lucky ducks town, and
everyone covers for him to save embarrassment for both father and daughter.
Expecting his luck to turn, Lucky disappears into the surrounding terrain in
search of another paying claim.
Evelyn |
Romance. Sgt.
Scarlett is smitten by Evelyn but events conspire to frustrate romance. She has
acquired an assistant who calls himself Travers but is in fact Dandy. When he
believes Lucky has made a strike, he plots to kidnap both father and daughter
and hold them in exchange for the claim.
In a plot twist too complicated to explain plausibly, he
persuades Evelyn to temporarily marry him. As the only authority able to grant
a marriage license out here on the far-flung Canadian frontier, Sgt. Scarlett
refuses to do the honors.
Within a stone’s throw of the American border, Evelyn and
Dandy are about to cross into the U.S. to get married, when Dandy’s girlfriend
Gelly shows up. Both she and her father, Nick, object to the couple’s plans, and
Chilkat Jo puts a stop to it all by firing a bullet through Dandy.
The passing of a year brings a semblance of civilization to
the camp. The Orphans have found husbands, and Evelyn has gone into the real
estate business. When her father finally appears, he explains that he’s found
the gold mine of his dreams but thanks to a memory malfunction he can’t
remember where it is.
Turns out, it’s on a spot that Evelyn already owns. When she
learns that the truth about her father was kept from her to save her embarrassment,
she forgives everyone in camp for their good intentions. Everyone, that is,
except Sgt. Scarlett. It takes a final change of heart for her to take him to
her bosom.
Bully, Raish, and Lucky |
Character. Sgt.
Scarlett is a comic version of that Canadian combination of manly virtues to be
found in frontier lawmen. Fundamentally decent and incorruptible, he commands respect without having to reinforce it with a gun.
The long arm of the law reaches from the very throne of England, and that seems
to carry weight enough.
He makes an interesting comparison with the U.S. marshal of
the period. As a representative of civilization, Scarlett is civilized himself.
In his uniform, he is a member of a military-style police force with ranks and
grades of authority. The U.S. marshal, though part of a large organization, has
more the character of a lone enforcer of the law. Skill with firearms also
makes him more intimidating.
Both men operate with a level of intelligence that makes
them more than a match for the outlaws they are up against. They each are
mentally and physically equipped to persevere and get their man. But Sgt.
Scarlett, a kind of Dudley Do Right, is too decent to be intimidating. The
outlaws in this story are mostly undone by their own stupidity. And instead of
getting his man, Scarlett gets the girl.
Wrapping up. The
novel is by no means a sentimental romance. Every turn in its story is played
for laughs. A New Yorker, Merington brings a sophisticated sensibility to her
material. Chaplin in The Gold Rush (1925) found comic material in
the same subject matter, but he left plenty of room for poignance.
Marguerite Merington (1857-1951) is remembered chiefly as a
playwright and as a pianist and composer. After the success of her first play, Captain
Lettarblair (1892), her stories and poems began appearing in Harper’s
and other slick magazines. Many more plays
appeared in the decades that followed. She was friend and literary executor of
Elizabeth Custer, editing a collection of letters written by her and her husband,
George.
Scarlett of the Mounted
is currently available online at Project Gutenberg, and also for kindle and the nook. For more of Friday’s Forgotten
Books, click on over to Patti Abbott’s blog.
Source: The
Ladies’ Home Journal, October 1893
Illustrations: A. duFord Piney, for the 1906 edition
Coming up: Saturday
music, Jo Dee Messina
I'm a pretty hard sell for humor, though I appreciate it much more now that I've gotten older. Strangely, I've written humorous things, like Days of Beer, but I don't read a lot of humor.
ReplyDeleteI'd say the same, except I'm currently reading Alfred Henry Lewis' WOLFVILLE, which is genuinely entertaining. It's a satirical and farcical portrayal of life in a cowtown, and the stories are very cleverly told.
DeleteWow you dug deep for this one. Interesting story line, as a kid I loved, “Sgt. Preston of the Northwest Mounted Police,” and like the novel I think it was that snappy uniform that I liked. Not sure I could make it through this one but may download and look at part of it.
ReplyDeleteLaughing. Yeah, it's not the bottom of the barrel, but you can see it from there.
ReplyDeleteThere's a lot happening in this novel with its odd bunch of characters and a seemingly complicated story line which, going by your fine review, is worthy of being read on a day of leisure. Which genre do these books fall under? I have a few ebooks like this one but I haven't got around to reading any of them.
ReplyDeleteI really don't know what to call this, Prashant. It's an early western by my definition of the term, but that's far from being a precise genre. Farce comes closer to putting it into a category.
DeleteAmazing find among the early westerns: a woman writing of women of the west and, oh yeah, those menfolk, too. Great illustrations, too. I want to read this one!
ReplyDeleteArletta Dawdy, author
HUACHUCA WOMAN