she had to go. After that, I was left without a
nurse. My little son was now about nine months old.
Milk began to be more plentiful at this season, and, with my sister's
advice and help, I decided to make the one great change in a baby's life
i.e., to take him from his mother. Modern methods were unknown then, and
we had neither of us any experience in these matters and there was no
doctor in the place.
The result was, that both the baby and myself were painfully and
desperately ill and not knowing which way to turn for aid, when, by a
lucky turn of Fortune's wheel, our good, dear Doctor Henry Lippincott
came through Ehrenberg on his way out to the States. Once more he took
care of us, and it is to him that I believe I owe my life.
Captain Ernest sent us a cook from Yuma, and soon some officers came
for the duck-shooting. There were thousands of ducks around the various
lagoons in the neighborhood, and the sport was rare. We had all the
ducks we could eat.
Then came an earthquake, which tore and rent the baked earth apart. The
ground shivered, the windows rattled, the birds fell close to the ground
and could not fly, the stove-pipes fell to the floor, the thick walls
cracked and finally, the earth rocked to and fro like some huge thing
trying to get its balance.
It was in the afternoon. My sister and I were sitting with our
needle-work in the living-room. Little Harry was on the floor, occupied
with some toys. I was paralyzed with fear; my sister did not move. We
sat gazing at each other, scarce daring to breathe, expecting every
instant the heavy walls to crumble about our heads. The earth rocked and
rocked, and rocked again, then swayed and swayed and finally was still.
My sister caught Harry in her arms, and then Jack and Willie came
breathlessly in. "Did you feel it?" said Jack.
"Did we feel it!" said I, scornfully.
Sarah was silent, and I looked so reproachfully at Jack, that he
dropped his light tone, and said: "It was pretty awful. We were in the
Goldwaters' store, when suddenly it grew dark and the lamps above our
heads began to rattle and swing, and we all rushed out into the middle
of the street and stood, rather dazed, for we scarcely knew what had
happened; then we hurried home. But it's all over now."
"I do not believe it," said I; "we shall have more"; and, in fact, we
did have two light shocks in the night, but no more followed, and the
next morning, we recovered, in a measure, from our f
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