Surely never altogether unhappy to one who has before him the Yosemite,
or, better still, carries its remembrance—a memory that can never die.
From San Francisco by boat to Stockton, from Stockton to Knight's
Ferry, from Knight's Ferry to Chinese Camp, from Chinese Camp to Garrote
(sugges-tive name in the mining regions), reaching supper and beds at ten
of the evening after seventy-one miles of staging.
As to the dust absorbed during those seventy-one miles—justice
cannot be done to it. It was California dust. What more can be said?
Not sand, not grit, nor any thing a traveler before knew by that name;
but powder, in which the horses' feet fall noiselessly, and which fills
hair, eyes, nose ears, throat, lungs, and skin, not only sifting through,
but dyeing every garment worn.
At first I strove to be godly—I mean akin to godly—cleanly; and
so signally failed in the last as to overthrow all hope of the first. I
worried, and shook, and brushed, and cleaned, and scoured till skin and
temper were equally rasped and life a burthen, and finally decided to be
consti-tutionally dirty and comfortable.
We were monuments of dust that night, and tired enough to sleep,
even at Garrote, but quite ready for an early start the next morning, and
impatient to reach Harden's Mills, twenty miles away, where we took horse
for the Valley.
No baggage save hand-bags. Three of the party encased against
wind and weather, unfashionable and picturesque; the fourth member of the
organization arrayed in a soft felt hat, blue costume consisting of loose
coat, skirt to the knee, Turkish trowsers, woollen stockings, and stout
shoes. So armed and equipped we bestrode our beasts, and were away to the
Yosemite, not, however, till we were joined by another party bound to the
same destination, one of the ladies surveying our lady with disdain, and
audibly desiring her companions to "look at that vulgar creature".
And the vulgar creature, from her safe and comfortable and natural
seat, surveyed the wretched "ladies' horses", sore of back, lame of leg,
beheld the girthing and tightening and fussing over the groaning and miserable
creat-ures, the lift into the saddles, the ungainly bags of figures composed
of half-long skirts and clumsy "waterproofs", the twisted bodies and uncomfortable
attitudes—took a mental look ahead at the twelve hours' ride over rough
and dangerous roads, smiled to herself, and thought, "look at those idiots".
Sensible and foolish, we started and rode hour after hour through
solemn aisles of majestic trees till, toward the close of the afternoon,
we reached open ground, where broke upon us the overture to the great harmony
toward which we tended—a sight to take one's breath, yet merely the vestibule
of the King's Temple beyond.
"Here," said the guide, "we begin the descent to the valley."
And we descended.
Mesdames, the critics, indulged in a good deal of screaming,
slipped at divers points, sometimes voluntarily, sometimes involuntarily,
from their horses, walked over the roughest places, summoned guides and
masculine friends to lead their animals, to render help of voice and hand,
embraced neck and mane of their four-legged servants, till the poor beasties
having this misery added to their torturing girths must have almost smothered,
and held on to saddle and pommel till hands, arms, and chests were strained
to numbness.
And no wonder!
Said Cushing, my tall, long-limbed, bright-haired, wide-awake
guide, who had bestrode every thing from a circus horse to a bucking Indian
pony—said Cushing, after jerking over and tightening down for the twentieth
time one of the one-sided leather abominations, "There ain't dust enough"
(gold dust, innocent Eastern friends!) "lying around loose to hire me to
ride on one of those things."
"Afraid of your neck?" said I.
"You bet," said he.
Through countless tribulations even the social martyrs reached
the end of the seven-miles' plunge, and rode forward, with the Ishmaels
of the party, into the Great Valley, the world's wonder, a sight for men
and angels to gaze at with awe!
Before us, at the left as we entered, shutting in the view, stood
"El Capitan," a perpendicular wall, no growth marring it, no jagged points
thrust out from it, no waste nor debris at its base, rising clean and grand
thirty-one hundred feet from a line already four thousand feet above the
sea. Broad and strong at foot and summit, it gives, more than any
other rock in the valley, a sense of solidity, power, massiveness.
Round the base of this we rode, rock after rock coming into sight,
taking strange and airy and wonderful and sub-lime shapes, changing and
changing again as we moved along and beheld them from different points
of vision.
Through the valley we advanced for the first time through the
solemn stillness of the night, the moonlight half revealing, half concealing
the awful mountain majesties circling round and resting with chastened
splendor upon a fall of water so white, so airy, so delicate as to seem
the ghost of a torrent, dropping its length twenty-six hundred feet!
Tired as I was, aching from head to toe, I forgot I had a body
as I gazed. Still, to confess to human weakness, I shed no tears
when, at nine o'clock, we found at Hutching's ranche a comfortable supper,
and beds that would certainly lull no sybarite to slumber, but were better
than double action spring mattresses to our weary brains and limbs.
I know of no more hopeless task than the effort to convey to
another any apprehension of this marvel of nature's handiwork. The popular
idea is that of a sort of magnificent gulch—two great walls of rock broken
at their summits.
The reality is a valley eight miles in length, and from half
a mile to a mile in width, a mountain stream rushing, white-crested, through
its centre, great pines adorning it, and the freshest of grass covering
the ground.
From this quiet greenness, level as a city avenue, with no gradual
slope, these marvelous shapes abruptly rise in air, white, shining, clean
of verdure, perfect in outlines, three, four, five thousand feet high;
rocks like cathedral domes and castle towers, rocks pointed so sharply
as to seem like needles, and rocks tapering off more softly and slowly
to their heads.
These fine and grand, these penetratingly beautiful shapes, have
been painted and copied and photographed till multitudes are familiar with
their outline, but neither picture nor description can convey any hint
of the height and depth, the greatness, the majesty of it all, and description
added to picture, and picture studied, and then the eye used on the living
presentment, all fail to enable you to grasp the marvelous whole.
You gaze and count, wonder and calculate, make your neck ache
and your understanding crack, and you say "this is two thousand," or "this
is five thousand feet high," or "this fall plunges down a thousand—twenty-six
hundred feet," and you iterate and repeat till the words and figures bear
no sense to your mind, and are but empty sounds.
There is nothing whereby to compare. The trees in the valley
elsewhere would be marvels. There, standing at the base of one of
these stupendous piles, they seem but common scanty growth, and this pile,
among its neighbors, is simply a rock in the midst of rocks, and if you
try to compel an understanding of the thing before you, you stretch and
struggle till the brain feels bursting, and at last confess your impotency.
You cannot grasp and take it in.
When we see from above, when the trammels and bounds of earthy
calculation and human ability are thrown aside, we may comprehend Yosemite,
but not now. It is the spiritual eyes alone that can behold with
the possessing vision this god-like scene.
But, to a mere human, what days of delight does it afford and
what memories to hold in trust! I bethink me of one evening when
we tramped past the lovely heads of the Three Graces, the stately strength
of the Sentinel, and the solemn majesty of the Cathedral Pile to behold
the sun-setting on one of the strangest "Bridal Veils" in the world.
Assuredly the spirit for which it was made must be "tall," and
ought to be "young and fair," since itself is in length nine hundred and
fifty feet.
Narrow at its top, and fanning out as it falls into lace-like
mist and filmy gossamer spray. Here and there through its spider web the
water gathers into arrow-heads drawing after them long spreading tails,
and looking, as they shoot downward, like marvels from frost or fairy land.
It had rained through the afternoon, and as we stood at the foot
of the fall, there were in full view four distinct bows spanning the valley
from the North to the Half Dome, with sections of other bows flung about
in lavish splendor. The fall itself was a dazzling mass of prismatic
hues, the sky and air filled with rosy and amber light, till at last the
glorious colors crept slowly up their shining ladder and left the fall
to a gray pallor that was wraith-like and sad.
And of one morning when we rode over to Mirror Lake, lying outside
the valley, on the placid surface of which the mountains around reappear
with marvelous fidelity, not only in shape and coloring, but seemingly
in the very texture of the rocks, till, as you gaze downward, you clap
hand on head, and prospect for signs of feet, to decide the relative positions
of each, and so make sure which is mountain and which shadow.
And of other and yet other days upon which we clambered up the
white granite face of this or that giant, to look out at his comrades,
and did not go astray, because we could not, in finding sights that would
have repaid the expenditure of any amount of time and toil.
And of one supreme day when we mounted steed, rode away under
the stately forest growth through the pass by the Half Dome, close to the
side of the sparkling and plunging Merced River, till the trail grew so
steep and narrow our animals could no further go, then, dismounting, took
to our own feet and the companionship of stout walking-sticks up a most
forbidding pathway that led us to the Vernal Fall.
A leap of three hundred and fifty feet, white as falling snow,
glittering as gems, laughing and dancing down its wall of glacier-like
rock, not grand, nor solemnizing, nor overwhelming, but just perfection—that
is the Vernal Fall.
We dived into waterproof cases and clambered on. The mud
ankle deep, the blinding spray beating against us like a heavy fall of
rain, so past its base, then, dropping the unwieldy over-garments, scrambled
by its side, up, up a ladder placed against the flat cheek of granite,
then up, up, up another ladder, and so were at the top.
A broad smooth table of stone, at its outer edge a natural parapet,
breast high, and shaped as though made with hands, over which one can lean
and look for hours—not content with this I crawled to the point where the
water plunged over the lip of the fall, thrust out my head, and tried to
gaze my fill at the dazzling mass as it swept down and away. Below
it the shining line of the river. The rocks of the valley in the
near distance. Afar a world of mountains. Overhead a few fleecy
clouds showing against a sky that was like polished turquoise.
After a space—oh, woeful falling off—we traveled onward to a
charming spot, midway the head of the Vernal and the foot of the Nevada
Falls, camped, ate our lunch—low be it spoken—with the appetite of wolves,
then, rested and refurbished, went our way to the Cap of Liberty.
The mountain is exactly defined by its name. It is as perfect
a Liberty Cap as though it were the great original, and the most beautiful
object to be seen even here.
Standing solitary from its base, not a rock touching it nor even
resting near, its face and sides white as purity, bare as penury and upright
as truth, its back a slope dotted with timber that makes it possible of
ascent, forty-eight hundred feet above the valley, and the valley four
thousand feed above the sea.
None but Indians and a venturesome guide had hitherto ascended
it, and at starting we were cheered by dismal forebodings and prognostications
of defeat.
Well, we went up it. What else should we do? A hard
climb, a hot climb, a steep climb; there were spaces where we had to take
off our shoes and travel in stocking feet—gingerly at that, and there were
places where my tall guide, having first "skinned up" perpendicular walls
of rock, then flattened and bent down, did his best to dislocate two pairs
of arms as he "yanked" me bodily to standing ground behind him, and there
were shining shelving reaches, glittering and slippery as ice that we crawled
over on hands and knees, and there were stretches of journey where we were
parched for want of water, and there were rattlesnakes in abundance, two
of which I killed with stick and claw, and was vastly inflated by the achievement,
and finally there was the summit!
A fragmentary view of the valley on the one side; on the other
the "Little Yosemite," at this distance almost rivaling in beauty its great
name sake; two far off mountains, "Cloud's Rest" and the "Cathedral Peak,"
dwarfing by their majesty those near at hand; ranges and spurs of the Sierras
with glittering heads, looming up across emerald spaces, here and there
a point so blue as to show black, so steep and high as to be blown bare
of snow, and close beside and above us, across the pallid brow of the "Half
Dome," a thunderstorm swirling and raging, deafening reverberations sounding
from peak to peak, lightning ripping the air with the sound of tearing
cambric, electricity clawing at the gazer with small fiend-like talons,
and at last calm and an effulgent light as the sun, dispersing all blots
and blemishes, moved slowly and majestically to the west.
So absorbed were we as to lose thought of time. When at
last we made the descent, struck across the intervening mile to the top
of the Nevada Fall, gazed at its 700 feet of splendor, dropped down its
side, and finally gained the parapet of the Vernal Fall, the air was no
longer dusky but dense—it was not twilight, but night.
Certainly the ladder transit was wild enough, back foremost,
hands and feet both in hard service, but that was holiday toil to the rest
of the tramp!
The way was dark. The path was slippery, stones, and foot-deep
mud making each step a danger; a wall of rock on the one hand, the wraith-like
fall of hundreds of feet on the other, an abyss beneath; a thunderous roar
filling the air, the spray and mist flying wild and white through the night.
Below us Egyptian darkness, all about us sombre mountains, inaccessible
heights, their tops thousands of feet away, peaks and points and towers
and pinnacles and domes, shapes of beauty and shapes of grace, and shapes
of majesty and power: these and these alone touched by the rising glory
of the moon, and fairly glittering in its light.
All experiences have an end. At last we gained our horses,
plunged down the gloomy treacherous trail, and at midnight reached our
temporary home.
Certainly we did very little climbing the next morning, but the
next evening I mounted my pony and rode away alone for a farewell sunset.
Rain had been falling, a refreshing shower from a sunlit sky,
and the air was full of a splendor of coloring that no pigment and canvas
could reproduce. On one side of the valley the rocks stood gray and
drear; on the other rich crimson gave way to purple, purple to amethyst,
amethyst to blue, blue to imperceptible shadings of delicate and exquisite
hues, the effect being not that of tinted granite, but of a haze that left
the outlines clearly defined, yet touched them with the softness of velvet.
At the west, where the mountains close in, a scrap of sky looking like
nothing so much as an enormous emerald.
I sat still on my pony till all the splendid phantasmagoria vanished,
and the stone sentries stood brown, gray, black, deep shadows lining them,
the gloom of night compassing them, watched by the solemn stillness of
the stars; and the next morning we rode away from both daylight and starlight
in the wonderful valley.
An all-day ride along the Maripose trail, to a night's repose
at "Clarke's ranche;" a morning with the Big Trees and their majestic neighbors
the firs and sugar-pines, each of these large enough to be elsewhere a
world's wonder, good things to see, good things to remember—one must lift
eye, and thought, and imagination to them even in memory—from these, fourteen
miles of "deep sea-diving," an undeviating descent that puts knee-pans
at a discount for some days thereafter, a ride ending at "White & Hatch's,"
where we were fed like kings and slept the sleep of the just.
A night coach-ride—the night void of moon and sights—suited not
us who wanted to see every thing, so our last stage was made in a hired
shebang which took us to Stockton.
Truly a fine-looking turn-out was presented to view at four o'clock
of the pleasant summer morning!
At least clean, whole, and unencumbered when we went into the
valley, we turned away therefrom and set our faces toward civilization
fit subjects for its chastening hand.
Capital horses, a spring wagon burdened with no luggage save
paltry hand-bags, yet furnishing no superfluous room for its human freight—a
big canvas bag of moss, another of cones, manzanita sticks, and other sticks
wrapped in shreds of garments, and tied together in unshapely bundles;
clumsy pieces of big-tree bark; thumping pieces of big-tree wood; cones
too precious to be trusted to the bag, held by their stems with questionable
rags draped preservatively about them; long poles festooned with moss thrust
out behind; presiding over all, four dirty, ragged, unshorn, unkempt, entirely
contented tramps with their German driver, and epitome of horse lore and
good-nature—a spectacle to provoke envy and horror.
Fortunately there were no critical eyes to gaze at us, and be
shocked at the sight. With change of animals we rode that day eighty-five
miles, and met not a soul. Every-where yellow wheat fields dotted
with oaks, but the country generally so lonely, so bare and parched as
to give one a sense of desolation.
Yet surely never before was seeming desolation such real richness.
We passed one wheat-field, unbroken by fence or stake, undivided save by
the beds of two rivers (needing no division, since it was the partnership
property of two men), fifty-seven miles in length!
Halted at a ferry thirty miles out of Stockton, and camped for
the night under the light of the "Lone Star."
I have traveled, and I am not squeamish, and I've stopped at
Western hotels, and difficult ones at that, but I confess to being appalled
at this hostel.
A house without upper regions. The lower regions carpetless,
furnitureless, save for a few benches about a central board in the diningroom;
beds as abandoned by their latest occupants, and infested by "their legal
inhabitants" (if length of possession gives right) in the sleeping cells;
some phenomenally dirty wash-basins without accompaniment of water, soap
or towels, in solitary possession of the toilet apartment, not another
thing in the place but bushels of meal-like dust lying round or heaped
up "promiscuous"—a species of furniture and ornamentation combined.
At least it served to fill spaces that would else have been given over
to absolute vacancy.
A big gaunt woman, mistress and maid, cooked us an atrociously
bad supper, a big gaunt man, her husband, served it, a half dozen villainous
looking drovers helped us eat it, after which, having failed to beg, borrow,
or steal any clean linen for the beds, I made them up wrong side out, retired
to my own den and slept on the floor—and avenge myself the next night at
Frisco, by ringing my bell at intervals of twenty minutes, and having the
entire procession of bell boys at the Cosmopolitan "roped in" to my service.
Copyright 2000, Enos Mills Cabin,
Temporal Mechanical Press
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