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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Land of Little Rain, by Mary Austin
+ </title>
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Land of Little Rain, by Mary Austin
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Land of Little Rain
+
+Author: Mary Austin
+
+Release Date: July 6, 2008 [EBook #365]
+Last Updated: January 26, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAND OF LITTLE RAIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Judith Boss, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+<h4>There are several editions of this ebook in the Project Gutenberg collection. <br />Various characteristics of each ebook are listed to aid in selecting the preferred file.<br />Click on any of the filenumbers below to quickly view each ebook.
+</h4>
+
+
+<table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto" cellpadding="4" border="3">
+
+<tr><td>
+ <b><a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10217/10217.txt">
+10217</a> </b> </td><td>(Text file)
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+
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+ <b><a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/365/365-h/365-h.htm">
+365</a></b></td><td>(HTML file with linked TOC)
+</td></tr>
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+51893</a></b> </td><td>(HTML file Illustrated in B&W with a Linked TOC)
+</td></tr>
+
+
+</table>
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE LAND OF LITTLE RAIN
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by Mary Austin
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h4>
+ TO EVE <br /> <br /> "The Comfortress of Unsuccess"
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE LAND OF LITTLE RAIN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> WATER TRAILS OF THE CERISO </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE SCAVENGERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> THE POCKET HUNTER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> SHOSHONE LAND </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> JIMVILLE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> MY NEIGHBOR'S FIELD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> THE MESA TRAIL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> THE BASKET MAKER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> THE STREETS OF THE MOUNTAINS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> WATER BORDERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> OTHER WATER BORDERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> NURSLINGS OF THE SKY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> THE LITTLE TOWN OF THE GRAPE VINES </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I confess to a great liking for the Indian fashion of name-giving: every
+ man known by that phrase which best expresses him to whoso names him. Thus
+ he may be Mighty-Hunter, or Man-Afraid-of-a-Bear, according as he is
+ called by friend or enemy, and Scar-Face to those who knew him by the
+ eye's grasp only. No other fashion, I think, sets so well with the various
+ natures that inhabit in us, and if you agree with me you will understand
+ why so few names are written here as they appear in the geography. For if
+ I love a lake known by the name of the man who discovered it, which
+ endears itself by reason of the close-locked pines it nourishes about its
+ borders, you may look in my account to find it so described. But if the
+ Indians have been there before me, you shall have their name, which is
+ always beautifully fit and does not originate in the poor human desire for
+ perpetuity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless there are certain peaks, canons, and clear meadow spaces
+ which are above all compassing of words, and have a certain fame as of the
+ nobly great to whom we give no familiar names. Guided by these you may
+ reach my country and find or not find, according as it lieth in you, much
+ that is set down here. And more. The earth is no wanton to give up all her
+ best to every comer, but keeps a sweet, separate intimacy for each. But if
+ you do not find it all as I write, think me not less dependable nor
+ yourself less clever. There is a sort of pretense allowed in matters of
+ the heart, as one should say by way of illustration, "I know a man who..."
+ and so give up his dearest experience without betrayal. And I am in no
+ mind to direct you to delectable places toward which you will hold
+ yourself less tenderly than I. So by this fashion of naming I keep faith
+ with the land and annex to my own estate a very great territory to which
+ none has a surer title.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country where you may have sight and touch of that which is written
+ lies between the high Sierras south from Yosemite&mdash;east and south
+ over a very great assemblage of broken ranges beyond Death Valley, and on
+ illimitably into the Mojave Desert. You may come into the borders of it
+ from the south by a stage journey that has the effect of involving a great
+ lapse of time, or from the north by rail, dropping out of the overland
+ route at Reno. The best of all ways is over the Sierra passes by pack and
+ trail, seeing and believing. But the real heart and core of the country
+ are not to be come at in a month's vacation. One must summer and winter
+ with the land and wait its occasions. Pine woods that take two and three
+ seasons to the ripening of cones, roots that lie by in the sand seven
+ years awaiting a growing rain, firs that grow fifty years before
+ flowering,&mdash;these do not scrape acquaintance. But if ever you come
+ beyond the borders as far as the town that lies in a hill dimple at the
+ foot of Kearsarge, never leave it until you have knocked at the door of
+ the brown house under the willow-tree at the end of the village street,
+ and there you shall have such news of the land, of its trails and what is
+ astir in them, as one lover of it can give to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE LAND OF LITTLE RAIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ East away from the Sierras, south from Panamint and Amargosa, east and
+ south many an uncounted mile, is the Country of Lost Borders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ute, Paiute, Mojave, and Shoshone inhabit its frontiers, and as far into
+ the heart of it as a man dare go. Not the law, but the land sets the
+ limit. Desert is the name it wears upon the maps, but the Indian's is the
+ better word. Desert is a loose term to indicate land that supports no man;
+ whether the land can be bitted and broken to that purpose is not proven.
+ Void of life it never is, however dry the air and villainous the soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the nature of that country. There are hills, rounded, blunt,
+ burned, squeezed up out of chaos, chrome and vermilion painted, aspiring
+ to the snowline. Between the hills lie high level-looking plains full of
+ intolerable sun glare, or narrow valleys drowned in a blue haze. The hill
+ surface is streaked with ash drift and black, unweathered lava flows.
+ After rains water accumulates in the hollows of small closed valleys, and,
+ evaporating, leaves hard dry levels of pure desertness that get the local
+ name of dry lakes. Where the mountains are steep and the rains heavy, the
+ pool is never quite dry, but dark and bitter, rimmed about with the
+ efflorescence of alkaline deposits. A thin crust of it lies along the
+ marsh over the vegetating area, which has neither beauty nor freshness. In
+ the broad wastes open to the wind the sand drifts in hummocks about the
+ stubby shrubs, and between them the soil shows saline traces. The
+ sculpture of the hills here is more wind than water work, though the quick
+ storms do sometimes scar them past many a year's redeeming. In all the
+ Western desert edges there are essays in miniature at the famed, terrible
+ Grand Canon, to which, if you keep on long enough in this country, you
+ will come at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since this is a hill country one expects to find springs, but not to
+ depend upon them; for when found they are often brackish and unwholesome,
+ or maddening, slow dribbles in a thirsty soil. Here you find the hot sink
+ of Death Valley, or high rolling districts where the air has always a tang
+ of frost. Here are the long heavy winds and breathless calms on the tilted
+ mesas where dust devils dance, whirling up into a wide, pale sky. Here you
+ have no rain when all the earth cries for it, or quick downpours called
+ cloud-bursts for violence. A land of lost rivers, with little in it to
+ love; yet a land that once visited must be come back to inevitably. If it
+ were not so there would be little told of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the country of three seasons. From June on to November it lies
+ hot, still, and unbearable, sick with violent unrelieving storms; then on
+ until April, chill, quiescent, drinking its scant rain and scanter snows;
+ from April to the hot season again, blossoming, radiant, and seductive.
+ These months are only approximate; later or earlier the rain-laden wind
+ may drift up the water gate of the Colorado from the Gulf, and the land
+ sets its seasons by the rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The desert floras shame us with their cheerful adaptations to the seasonal
+ limitations. Their whole duty is to flower and fruit, and they do it
+ hardly, or with tropical luxuriance, as the rain admits. It is recorded in
+ the report of the Death Valley expedition that after a year of abundant
+ rains, on the Colorado desert was found a specimen of Amaranthus ten feet
+ high. A year later the same species in the same place matured in the
+ drought at four inches. One hopes the land may breed like qualities in her
+ human offspring, not tritely to "try," but to do. Seldom does the desert
+ herb attain the full stature of the type. Extreme aridity and extreme
+ altitude have the same dwarfing effect, so that we find in the high
+ Sierras and in Death Valley related species in miniature that reach a
+ comely growth in mean temperatures. Very fertile are the desert plants in
+ expedients to prevent evaporation, turning their foliage edge-wise toward
+ the sun, growing silky hairs, exuding viscid gum. The wind, which has a
+ long sweep, harries and helps them. It rolls up dunes about the stocky
+ stems, encompassing and protective, and above the dunes, which may be, as
+ with the mesquite, three times as high as a man, the blossoming twigs
+ flourish and bear fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are many areas in the desert where drinkable water lies within a few
+ feet of the surface, indicated by the mesquite and the bunch grass
+ (Sporobolus airoides). It is this nearness of unimagined help that makes
+ the tragedy of desert deaths. It is related that the final breakdown of
+ that hapless party that gave Death Valley its forbidding name occurred in
+ a locality where shallow wells would have saved them. But how were they to
+ know that? Properly equipped it is possible to go safely across that
+ ghastly sink, yet every year it takes its toll of death, and yet men find
+ there sun-dried mummies, of whom no trace or recollection is preserved. To
+ underestimate one's thirst, to pass a given landmark to the right or left,
+ to find a dry spring where one looked for running water&mdash;there is no
+ help for any of these things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along springs and sunken watercourses one is surprised to find such
+ water-loving plants as grow widely in moist ground, but the true desert
+ breeds its own kind, each in its particular habitat. The angle of the
+ slope, the frontage of a hill, the structure of the soil determines the
+ plant. South-looking hills are nearly bare, and the lower tree-line higher
+ here by a thousand feet. Canons running east and west will have one wall
+ naked and one clothed. Around dry lakes and marshes the herbage preserves
+ a set and orderly arrangement. Most species have well-defined areas of
+ growth, the best index the voiceless land can give the traveler of his
+ whereabouts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you have any doubt about it, know that the desert begins with the
+ creosote. This immortal shrub spreads down into Death Valley and up to the
+ lower timberline, odorous and medicinal as you might guess from the name,
+ wandlike, with shining fretted foliage. Its vivid green is grateful to the
+ eye in a wilderness of gray and greenish white shrubs. In the spring it
+ exudes a resinous gum which the Indians of those parts know how to use
+ with pulverized rock for cementing arrow points to shafts. Trust Indians
+ not to miss any virtues of the plant world!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing the desert produces expresses it better than the unhappy growth of
+ the tree yuccas. Tormented, thin forests of it stalk drearily in the high
+ mesas, particularly in that triangular slip that fans out eastward from
+ the meeting of the Sierras and coastwise hills where the first swings
+ across the southern end of the San Joaquin Valley. The yucca bristles with
+ bayonet-pointed leaves, dull green, growing shaggy with age, tipped with
+ panicles of fetid, greenish bloom. After death, which is slow, the ghostly
+ hollow network of its woody skeleton, with hardly power to rot, makes the
+ moonlight fearful. Before the yucca has come to flower, while yet its
+ bloom is a creamy cone-shaped bud of the size of a small cabbage, full of
+ sugary sap, the Indians twist it deftly out of its fence of daggers and
+ roast it for their own delectation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it is that in those parts where man inhabits one sees young plants of
+ Yucca arborensis infrequently. Other yuccas, cacti, low herbs, a thousand
+ sorts, one finds journeying east from the coastwise hills. There is
+ neither poverty of soil nor species to account for the sparseness of
+ desert growth, but simply that each plant requires more room. So much
+ earth must be preempted to extract so much moisture. The real struggle for
+ existence, the real brain of the plant, is underground; above there is
+ room for a rounded perfect growth. In Death Valley, reputed the very core
+ of desolation, are nearly two hundred identified species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Above the lower tree-line, which is also the snowline, mapped out abruptly
+ by the sun, one finds spreading growth of pinon, juniper, branched nearly
+ to the ground, lilac and sage, and scattering white pines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no special preponderance of self-fertilized or wind-fertilized
+ plants, but everywhere the demand for and evidence of insect life. Now
+ where there are seeds and insects there will be birds and small mammals
+ and where these are, will come the slinking, sharp-toothed kind that prey
+ on them. Go as far as you dare in the heart of a lonely land, you cannot
+ go so far that life and death are not before you. Painted lizards slip in
+ and out of rock crevices, and pant on the white hot sands. Birds,
+ hummingbirds even, nest in the cactus scrub; woodpeckers befriend the
+ demoniac yuccas; out of the stark, treeless waste rings the music of the
+ night-singing mockingbird. If it be summer and the sun well down, there
+ will be a burrowing owl to call. Strange, furry, tricksy things dart
+ across the open places, or sit motionless in the conning towers of the
+ creosote. The poet may have "named all the birds without a gun," but not
+ the fairy-footed, ground-inhabiting, furtive, small folk of the rainless
+ regions. They are too many and too swift; how many you would not believe
+ without seeing the footprint tracings in the sand. They are nearly all
+ night workers, finding the days too hot and white. In mid-desert where
+ there are no cattle, there are no birds of carrion, but if you go far in
+ that direction the chances are that you will find yourself shadowed by
+ their tilted wings. Nothing so large as a man can move unspied upon in
+ that country, and they know well how the land deals with strangers. There
+ are hints to be had here of the way in which a land forces new habits on
+ its dwellers. The quick increase of suns at the end of spring sometimes
+ overtakes birds in their nesting and effects a reversal of the ordinary
+ manner of incubation. It becomes necessary to keep eggs cool rather than
+ warm. One hot, stifling spring in the Little Antelope I had occasion to
+ pass and repass frequently the nest of a pair of meadowlarks, located
+ unhappily in the shelter of a very slender weed. I never caught them
+ sitting except near night, but at mid-day they stood, or drooped above it,
+ half fainting with pitifully parted bills, between their treasure and the
+ sun. Sometimes both of them together with wings spread and half lifted
+ continued a spot of shade in a temperature that constrained me at last in
+ a fellow feeling to spare them a bit of canvas for permanent shelter.
+ There was a fence in that country shutting in a cattle range, and along
+ its fifteen miles of posts one could be sure of finding a bird or two in
+ every strip of shadow; sometimes the sparrow and the hawk, with wings
+ trailed and beaks parted, drooping in the white truce of noon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If one is inclined to wonder at first how so many dwellers came to be in
+ the loneliest land that ever came out of God's hands, what they do there
+ and why stay, one does not wonder so much after having lived there. None
+ other than this long brown land lays such a hold on the affections. The
+ rainbow hills, the tender bluish mists, the luminous radiance of the
+ spring, have the lotus charm. They trick the sense of time, so that once
+ inhabiting there you always mean to go away without quite realizing that
+ you have not done it. Men who have lived there, miners and cattlemen, will
+ tell you this, not so fluently, but emphatically, cursing the land and
+ going back to it. For one thing there is the divinest, cleanest air to be
+ breathed anywhere in God's world. Some day the world will understand that,
+ and the little oases on the windy tops of hills will harbor for healing
+ its ailing, house-weary broods. There is promise there of great wealth in
+ ores and earths, which is no wealth by reason of being so far removed from
+ water and workable conditions, but men are bewitched by it and tempted to
+ try the impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You should hear Salty Williams tell how he used to drive eighteen and
+ twenty-mule teams from the borax marsh to Mojave, ninety miles, with the
+ trail wagon full of water barrels. Hot days the mules would go so mad for
+ drink that the clank of the water bucket set them into an uproar of
+ hideous, maimed noises, and a tangle of harness chains, while Salty would
+ sit on the high seat with the sun glare heavy in his eyes, dealing out
+ curses of pacification in a level, uninterested voice until the clamor
+ fell off from sheer exhaustion. There was a line of shallow graves along
+ that road; they used to count on dropping a man or two of every new gang
+ of coolies brought out in the hot season. But when he lost his swamper,
+ smitten without warning at the noon halt, Salty quit his job; he said it
+ was "too durn hot." The swamper he buried by the way with stones upon him
+ to keep the coyotes from digging him up, and seven years later I read the
+ penciled lines on the pine head-board, still bright and unweathered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before that, driving up on the Mojave stage, I met Salty again
+ crossing Indian Wells, his face from the high seat, tanned and ruddy as a
+ harvest moon, looming through the golden dust above his eighteen mules.
+ The land had called him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The palpable sense of mystery in the desert air breeds fables, chiefly of
+ lost treasure. Somewhere within its stark borders, if one believes report,
+ is a hill strewn with nuggets; one seamed with virgin silver; an old
+ clayey water-bed where Indians scooped up earth to make cooking pots and
+ shaped them reeking with grains of pure gold. Old miners drifting about
+ the desert edges, weathered into the semblance of the tawny hills, will
+ tell you tales like these convincingly. After a little sojourn in that
+ land you will believe them on their own account. It is a question whether
+ it is not better to be bitten by the little horned snake of the desert
+ that goes sidewise and strikes without coiling, than by the tradition of a
+ lost mine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;is it not perhaps to satisfy expectation that
+ one falls into the tragic key in writing of desertness? The more you wish
+ of it the more you get, and in the mean time lose much of pleasantness. In
+ that country which begins at the foot of the east slope of the Sierras and
+ spreads out by less and less lofty hill ranges toward the Great Basin, it
+ is possible to live with great zest, to have red blood and delicate joys,
+ to pass and repass about one's daily performance an area that would make
+ an Atlantic seaboard State, and that with no peril, and, according to our
+ way of thought, no particular difficulty. At any rate, it was not people
+ who went into the desert merely to write it up who invented the fabled
+ Hassaympa, of whose waters, if any drink, they can no more see fact as
+ naked fact, but all radiant with the color of romance. I, who must have
+ drunk of it in my twice seven years' wanderings, am assured that it is
+ worth while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For all the toll the desert takes of a man it gives compensations, deep
+ breaths, deep sleep, and the communion of the stars. It comes upon one
+ with new force in the pauses of the night that the Chaldeans were a
+ desert-bred people. It is hard to escape the sense of mastery as the stars
+ move in the wide clear heavens to risings and settings unobscured. They
+ look large and near and palpitant; as if they moved on some stately
+ service not needful to declare. Wheeling to their stations in the sky,
+ they make the poor world-fret of no account. Of no account you who lie out
+ there watching, nor the lean coyote that stands off in the scrub from you
+ and howls and howls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WATER TRAILS OF THE CERISO
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By the end of the dry season the water trails of the Ceriso are worn to a
+ white ribbon in the leaning grass, spread out faint and fanwise toward the
+ homes of gopher and ground rat and squirrel. But however faint to
+ man-sight, they are sufficiently plain to the furred and feathered folk
+ who travel them. Getting down to the eye level of rat and squirrel kind,
+ one perceives what might easily be wide and winding roads to us if they
+ occurred in thick plantations of trees three times the height of a man. It
+ needs but a slender thread of barrenness to make a mouse trail in the
+ forest of the sod. To the little people the water trails are as country
+ roads, with scents as signboards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems that man-height is the least fortunate of all heights from which
+ to study trails. It is better to go up the front of some tall hill, say
+ the spur of Black Mountain, looking back and down across the hollow of the
+ Ceriso. Strange how long the soil keeps the impression of any continuous
+ treading, even after grass has overgrown it. Twenty years since, a brief
+ heyday of mining at Black Mountain made a stage road across the Ceriso,
+ yet the parallel lines that are the wheel traces show from the height dark
+ and well defined. Afoot in the Ceriso one looks in vain for any sign of
+ it. So all the paths that wild creatures use going down to the Lone Tree
+ Spring are mapped out whitely from this level, which is also the level of
+ the hawks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is little water in the Ceriso at the best of times, and that little
+ brackish and smelling vilely, but by a lone juniper where the rim of the
+ Ceriso breaks away to the lower country, there is a perpetual rill of
+ fresh sweet drink in the midst of lush grass and watercress. In the dry
+ season there is no water else for a man's long journey of a day. East to
+ the foot of Black Mountain, and north and south without counting, are the
+ burrows of small rodents, rat and squirrel kind. Under the sage are the
+ shallow forms of the jackrabbits, and in the dry banks of washes, and
+ among the strewn fragments of black rock, lairs of bobcat, fox, and
+ coyote.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The coyote is your true water-witch, one who snuffs and paws, snuffs and
+ paws again at the smallest spot of moisture-scented earth until he has
+ freed the blind water from the soil. Many water-holes are no more than
+ this detected by the lean hobo of the hills in localities where not even
+ an Indian would look for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the opinion of many wise and busy people that the hill-folk pass the
+ ten-month interval between the end and renewal of winter rains, with no
+ drink; but your true idler, with days and nights to spend beside the water
+ trails, will not subscribe to it. The trails begin, as I said, very far
+ back in the Ceriso, faintly, and converge in one span broad, white,
+ hard-trodden way in the gully of the spring. And why trails if there are
+ no travelers in that direction?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have yet to find the land not scarred by the thin, far roadways of
+ rabbits and what not of furry folks that run in them. Venture to look for
+ some seldom-touched water-hole, and so long as the trails run with your
+ general direction make sure you are right, but if they begin to cross
+ yours at never so slight an angle, to converge toward a point left or
+ right of your objective, no matter what the maps say, or your memory,
+ trust them; they know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is very still in the Ceriso by day, so that were it not for the
+ evidence of those white beaten ways, it might be the desert it looks. The
+ sun is hot in the dry season, and the days are filled with the glare of
+ it. Now and again some unseen coyote signals his pack in a long-drawn,
+ dolorous whine that comes from no determinate point, but nothing stirs
+ much before mid-afternoon. It is a sign when there begin to be hawks
+ skimming above the sage that the little people are going about their
+ business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have fallen on a very careless usage, speaking of wild creatures as if
+ they were bound by some such limitation as hampers clockwork. When we say
+ of one and another, they are night prowlers, it is perhaps true only as
+ the things they feed upon are more easily come by in the dark, and they
+ know well how to adjust themselves to conditions wherein food is more
+ plentiful by day. And their accustomed performance is very much a matter
+ of keen eye, keener scent, quick ear, and a better memory of sights and
+ sounds than man dares boast. Watch a coyote come out of his lair and cast
+ about in his mind where he will go for his daily killing. You cannot very
+ well tell what decides him, but very easily that he has decided. He trots
+ or breaks into short gallops, with very perceptible pauses to look up and
+ about at landmarks, alters his tack a little, looking forward and back to
+ steer his proper course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am persuaded that the coyotes in my valley, which is narrow and beset
+ with steep, sharp hills, in long passages steer by the pinnacles of the
+ sky-line, going with head cocked to one side to keep to the left or right
+ of such and such a promontory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have trailed a coyote often, going across country, perhaps to where some
+ slant-winged scavenger hanging in the air signaled prospect of a dinner,
+ and found his track such as a man, a very intelligent man accustomed to a
+ hill country, and a little cautious, would make to the same point. Here a
+ detour to avoid a stretch of too little cover, there a pause on the rim of
+ a gully to pick the better way,&mdash;and it is usually the best way,&mdash;and
+ making his point with the greatest economy of effort. Since the time of
+ Seyavi the deer have shifted their feeding ground across the valley at the
+ beginning of deep snows, by way of the Black Rock, fording the river at
+ Charley's Butte, and making straight for the mouth of the canon that is
+ the easiest going to the winter pastures on Waban. So they still cross,
+ though whatever trail they had has been long broken by ploughed ground;
+ but from the mouth of Tinpah Creek, where the deer come out of the
+ Sierras, it is easily seen that the creek, the point of Black Rock, and
+ Charley's Butte are in line with the wide bulk of shade that is the foot
+ of Waban Pass. And along with this the deer have learned that Charley's
+ Butte is almost the only possible ford, and all the shortest crossing of
+ the valley. It seems that the wild creatures have learned all that is
+ important to their way of life except the changes of the moon. I have seen
+ some prowling fox or coyote, surprised by its sudden rising from behind
+ the mountain wall, slink in its increasing glow, watch it furtively from
+ the cover of near-by brush, unprepared and half uncertain of its identity
+ until it rode clear of the peaks, and finally make off with all the air of
+ one caught napping by an ancient joke. The moon in its wanderings must be
+ a sort of exasperation to cunning beasts, likely to spoil by untimely
+ risings some fore-planned mischief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to take the trail again; the coyotes that are astir in the Ceriso of
+ late afternoons, harrying the rabbits from their shallow forms, and the
+ hawks that sweep and swing above them, are not there from any mechanical
+ promptings of instinct, but because they know of old experience that the
+ small fry are about to take to seed gathering and the water trails. The
+ rabbits begin it, taking the trail with long, light leaps, one eye and ear
+ cocked to the hills from whence a coyote might descend upon them at any
+ moment. Rabbits are a foolish people. They do not fight except with their
+ own kind, nor use their paws except for feet, and appear to have no reason
+ for existence but to furnish meals for meat-eaters. In flight they seem to
+ rebound from the earth of their own elasticity, but keep a sober pace
+ going to the spring. It is the young watercress that tempts them and the
+ pleasures of society, for they seldom drink. Even in localities where
+ there are flowing streams they seem to prefer the moisture that collects
+ on herbage, and after rains may be seen rising on their haunches to drink
+ delicately the clear drops caught in the tops of the young sage. But drink
+ they must, as I have often seen them mornings and evenings at the rill
+ that goes by my door. Wait long enough at the Lone Tree Spring and sooner
+ or later they will all come in. But here their matings are accomplished,
+ and though they are fearful of so little as a cloud shadow or blown leaf,
+ they contrive to have some playful hours. At the spring the bobcat drops
+ down upon them from the black rock, and the red fox picks them up
+ returning in the dark. By day the hawk and eagle overshadow them, and the
+ coyote has all times and seasons for his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cattle, when there are any in the Ceriso, drink morning and evening,
+ spending the night on the warm last lighted slopes of neighboring hills,
+ stirring with the peep o' day. In these half wild spotted steers the
+ habits of an earlier lineage persist. It must be long since they have made
+ beds for themselves, but before lying down they turn themselves round and
+ round as dogs do. They choose bare and stony ground, exposed fronts of
+ westward facing hills, and lie down in companies. Usually by the end of
+ the summer the cattle have been driven or gone of their own choosing to
+ the mountain meadows. One year a maverick yearling, strayed or overlooked
+ by the vaqueros, kept on until the season's end, and so betrayed another
+ visitor to the spring that else I might have missed. On a certain morning
+ the half-eaten carcass lay at the foot of the black rock, and in moist
+ earth by the rill of the spring, the foot-pads of a cougar, puma, mountain
+ lion, or whatever the beast is rightly called. The kill must have been
+ made early in the evening, for it appeared that the cougar had been twice
+ to the spring; and since the meat-eater drinks little until he has eaten,
+ he must have fed and drunk, and after an interval of lying up in the black
+ rock, had eaten and drunk again. There was no knowing how far he had come,
+ but if he came again the second night he found that the coyotes had left
+ him very little of his kill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nobody ventures to say how infrequently and at what hour the small fry
+ visit the spring. There are such numbers of them that if each came once
+ between the last of spring and the first of winter rains, there would
+ still be water trails. I have seen badgers drinking about the hour when
+ the light takes on the yellow tinge it has from coming slantwise through
+ the hills. They find out shallow places, and are loath to wet their feet.
+ Rats and chipmunks have been observed visiting the spring as late as nine
+ o'clock mornings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The larger spermophiles that live near the spring and keep awake to work
+ all day, come and go at no particular hour, drinking sparingly. At long
+ intervals on half-lighted days, meadow and field mice steal delicately
+ along the trail. These visitors are all too small to be watched carefully
+ at night, but for evidence of their frequent coming there are the trails
+ that may be traced miles out among the crisping grasses. On rare nights,
+ in the places where no grass grows between the shrubs, and the sand
+ silvers whitely to the moon, one sees them whisking to and fro on
+ innumerable errands of seed gathering, but the chief witnesses of their
+ presence near the spring are the elf owls. Those burrow-haunting, speckled
+ fluffs of greediness begin a twilight flitting toward the spring, feeding
+ as they go on grasshoppers, lizards, and small, swift creatures, diving
+ into burrows to catch field mice asleep, battling with chipmunks at their
+ own doors, and getting down in great numbers toward the long juniper. Now
+ owls do not love water greatly on its own account. Not to my knowledge
+ have I caught one drinking or bathing, though on night wanderings across
+ the mesa they flit up from under the horse's feet along stream borders.
+ Their presence near the spring in great numbers would indicate the
+ presence of the things they feed upon. All night the rustle and soft
+ hooting keeps on in the neighborhood of the spring, with seldom small
+ shrieks of mortal agony. It is clear day before they have all gotten back
+ to their particular hummocks, and if one follows cautiously, not to
+ frighten them into some near-by burrow, it is possible to trail them far
+ up the slope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crested quail that troop in the Ceriso are the happiest frequenters of
+ the water trails. There is no furtiveness about their morning drink. About
+ the time the burrowers and all that feed upon them are addressing
+ themselves to sleep, great flocks pour down the trails with that peculiar
+ melting motion of moving quail, twittering, shoving, and shouldering. They
+ splatter into the shallows, drink daintily, shake out small showers over
+ their perfect coats, and melt away again into the scrub, preening and
+ pranking, with soft contented noises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the quail, sparrows and ground-inhabiting birds bathe with the
+ utmost frankness and a great deal of splutter; and here in the heart of
+ noon hawks resort, sitting panting, with wings aslant, and a truce to all
+ hostilities because of the heat. One summer there came a road-runner up
+ from the lower valley, peeking and prying, and he had never any patience
+ with the water baths of the sparrows. His own ablutions were performed in
+ the clean, hopeful dust of the chaparral; and whenever he happened on
+ their morning splatterings, he would depress his glossy crest, slant his
+ shining tail to the level of his body, until he looked most like some
+ bright venomous snake, daunting them with shrill abuse and feint of
+ battle. Then suddenly he would go tilting and balancing down the gully in
+ fine disdain, only to return in a day or two to make sure the foolish
+ bodies were still at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out on the Ceriso about five miles, and wholly out of sight of it, near
+ where the immemorial foot trail goes up from Saline Flat toward Black
+ Mountain, is a water sign worth turning out of the trail to see. It is a
+ laid circle of stones large enough not to be disturbed by any ordinary
+ hap, with an opening flanked by two parallel rows of similar stones,
+ between which were an arrow placed, touching the opposite rim of the
+ circle, thus it would point as the crow flies to the spring. It is the
+ old, indubitable water mark of the Shoshones. One still finds it in the
+ desert ranges in Salt Wells and Mesquite valleys, and along the slopes of
+ Waban. On the other side of Ceriso, where the black rock begins, about a
+ mile from the spring, is the work of an older, forgotten people. The rock
+ hereabout is all volcanic, fracturing with a crystalline whitish surface,
+ but weathered outside to furnace blackness. Around the spring, where must
+ have been a gathering place of the tribes, it is scored over with strange
+ pictures and symbols that have no meaning to the Indians of the present
+ day; but out where the rock begins, there is carved into the white heart
+ of it a pointing arrow over the symbol for distance and a circle full of
+ wavy lines reading thus: "In this direction three [units of measurement
+ unknown] is a spring of sweet water; look for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SCAVENGERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Fifty-seven buzzards, one on each of fifty-seven fence posts at the rancho
+ El Tejon, on a mirage-breeding September morning, sat solemnly while the
+ white tilted travelers' vans lumbered down the Canada de los Uvas. After
+ three hours they had only clapped their wings, or exchanged posts. The
+ season's end in the vast dim valley of the San Joaquin is palpitatingly
+ hot, and the air breathes like cotton wool. Through it all the buzzards
+ sit on the fences and low hummocks, with wings spread fanwise for air.
+ There is no end to them, and they smell to heaven. Their heads droop, and
+ all their communication is a rare, horrid croak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The increase of wild creatures is in proportion to the things they feed
+ upon: the more carrion the more buzzards. The end of the third successive
+ dry year bred them beyond belief. The first year quail mated sparingly;
+ the second year the wild oats matured no seed; the third, cattle died in
+ their tracks with their heads towards the stopped watercourses. And that
+ year the scavengers were as black as the plague all across the mesa and up
+ the treeless, tumbled hills. On clear days they betook themselves to the
+ upper air, where they hung motionless for hours. That year there were
+ vultures among them, distinguished by the white patches under the wings.
+ All their offensiveness notwithstanding, they have a stately flight. They
+ must also have what pass for good qualities among themselves, for they are
+ social, not to say clannish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a very squalid tragedy,&mdash;that of the dying brutes and the
+ scavenger birds. Death by starvation is slow. The heavy-headed, rack-boned
+ cattle totter in the fruitless trails; they stand for long, patient
+ intervals; they lie down and do not rise. There is fear in their eyes when
+ they are first stricken, but afterward only intolerable weariness. I
+ suppose the dumb creatures know nearly as much of death as do their
+ betters, who have only the more imagination. Their even-breathing
+ submission after the first agony is their tribute to its inevitableness.
+ It needs a nice discrimination to say which of the basket-ribbed cattle is
+ likest to afford the next meal, but the scavengers make few mistakes. One
+ stoops to the quarry and the flock follows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cattle once down may be days in dying. They stretch out their necks along
+ the ground, and roll up their slow eyes at longer intervals. The buzzards
+ have all the time, and no beak is dropped or talon struck until the breath
+ is wholly passed. It is doubtless the economy of nature to have the
+ scavengers by to clean up the carrion, but a wolf at the throat would be a
+ shorter agony than the long stalking and sometime perchings of these
+ loathsome watchers. Suppose now it were a man in this long-drawn, hungrily
+ spied upon distress! When Timmie O'Shea was lost on Armogosa Flats for
+ three days without water, Long Tom Basset found him, not by any trail, but
+ by making straight away for the points where he saw buzzards stooping. He
+ could hear the beat of their wings, Tom said, and trod on their shadows,
+ but O'Shea was past recalling what he thought about things after the
+ second day. My friend Ewan told me, among other things, when he came back
+ from San Juan Hill, that not all the carnage of battle turned his bowels
+ as the sight of slant black wings rising flockwise before the burial
+ squad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are three kinds of noises buzzards make,&mdash;it is impossible to
+ call them notes,&mdash;raucous and elemental. There is a short croak of
+ alarm, and the same syllable in a modified tone to serve all the purposes
+ of ordinary conversation. The old birds make a kind of throaty chuckling
+ to their young, but if they have any love song I have not heard it. The
+ young yawp in the nest a little, with more breath than noise. It is seldom
+ one finds a buzzard's nest, seldom that grown-ups find a nest of any sort;
+ it is only children to whom these things happen by right. But by making a
+ business of it one may come upon them in wide, quiet canons, or on the
+ lookouts of lonely, table-topped mountains, three or four together, in the
+ tops of stubby trees or on rotten cliffs well open to the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is probable that the buzzard is gregarious, but it seems unlikely from
+ the small number of young noted at any time that every female incubates
+ each year. The young birds are easily distinguished by their size when
+ feeding, and high up in air by the worn primaries of the older birds. It
+ is when the young go out of the nest on their first foraging that the
+ parents, full of a crass and simple pride, make their indescribable
+ chucklings of gobbling, gluttonous delight. The little ones would be
+ amusing as they tug and tussle, if one could forget what it is they feed
+ upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One never comes any nearer to the vulture's nest or nestlings than
+ hearsay. They keep to the southerly Sierras, and are bold enough, it
+ seems, to do killing on their own account when no carrion is at hand. They
+ dog the shepherd from camp to camp, the hunter home from the hill, and
+ will even carry away offal from under his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vulture merits respect for his bigness and for his bandit airs, but he
+ is a sombre bird, with none of the buzzard's frank satisfaction in his
+ offensiveness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The least objectionable of the inland scavengers is the raven, frequenter
+ of the desert ranges, the same called locally "carrion crow." He is
+ handsomer and has such an air. He is nice in his habits and is said to
+ have likable traits. A tame one in a Shoshone camp was the butt of much
+ sport and enjoyed it. He could all but talk and was another with the
+ children, but an arrant thief. The raven will eat most things that come
+ his way,&mdash;eggs and young of ground-nesting birds, seeds even, lizards
+ and grasshoppers, which he catches cleverly; and whatever he is about, let
+ a coyote trot never so softly by, the raven flaps up and after; for
+ whatever the coyote can pull down or nose out is meat also for the carrion
+ crow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And never a coyote comes out of his lair for killing, in the country of
+ the carrion crows, but looks up first to see where they may be gathering.
+ It is a sufficient occupation for a windy morning, on the lineless, level
+ mesa, to watch the pair of them eying each other furtively, with a
+ tolerable assumption of unconcern, but no doubt with a certain amount of
+ good understanding about it. Once at Red Rock, in a year of green pasture,
+ which is a bad time for the scavengers, we saw two buzzards, five ravens,
+ and a coyote feeding on the same carrion, and only the coyote seemed
+ ashamed of the company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably we never fully credit the interdependence of wild creatures, and
+ their cognizance of the affairs of their own kind. When the five coyotes
+ that range the Tejon from Pasteria to Tunawai planned a relay race to
+ bring down an antelope strayed from the band, beside myself to watch, an
+ eagle swung down from Mt. Pinos, buzzards materialized out of invisible
+ ether, and hawks came trooping like small boys to a street fight. Rabbits
+ sat up in the chaparral and cocked their ears, feeling themselves quite
+ safe for the once as the hunt swung near them. Nothing happens in the deep
+ wood that the blue jays are not all agog to tell. The hawk follows the
+ badger, the coyote the carrion crow, and from their aerial stations the
+ buzzards watch each other. What would be worth knowing is how much of
+ their neighbor's affairs the new generations learn for themselves, and how
+ much they are taught of their elders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So wide is the range of the scavengers that it is never safe to say,
+ eyewitness to the contrary, that there are few or many in such a place.
+ Where the carrion is, there will the buzzards be gathered together, and in
+ three days' journey you will not sight another one. The way up from Mojave
+ to Red Butte is all desertness, affording no pasture and scarcely a rill
+ of water. In a year of little rain in the south, flocks and herds were
+ driven to the number of thousands along this road to the perennial
+ pastures of the high ranges. It is a long, slow trail, ankle deep in
+ bitter dust that gets up in the slow wind and moves along the backs of the
+ crawling cattle. In the worst of times one in three will pine and fall out
+ by the way. In the defiles of Red Rock, the sheep piled up a stinking
+ lane; it was the sun smiting by day. To these shambles came buzzards,
+ vultures, and coyotes from all the country round, so that on the Tejon,
+ the Ceriso, and the Little Antelope there were not scavengers enough to
+ keep the country clean. All that summer the dead mummified in the open or
+ dropped slowly back to earth in the quagmires of the bitter springs.
+ Meanwhile from Red Rock to Coyote Holes, and from Coyote Holes to Haiwai
+ the scavengers gorged and gorged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The coyote is not a scavenger by choice, preferring his own kill, but
+ being on the whole a lazy dog, is apt to fall into carrion eating because
+ it is easier. The red fox and bobcat, a little pressed by hunger, will eat
+ of any other animal's kill, but will not ordinarily touch what dies of
+ itself, and are exceedingly shy of food that has been man-handled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very clean and handsome, quite belying his relationship in appearance, is
+ Clark's crow, that scavenger and plunderer of mountain camps. It is
+ permissible to call him by his common name, "Camp Robber:" he has earned
+ it. Not content with refuse, he pecks open meal sacks, filches whole
+ potatoes, is a gormand for bacon, drills holes in packing cases, and is
+ daunted by nothing short of tin. All the while he does not neglect to
+ vituperate the chipmunks and sparrows that whisk off crumbs of comfort
+ from under the camper's feet. The Camp Robber's gray coat, black and white
+ barred wings, and slender bill, with certain tricks of perching, accuse
+ him of attempts to pass himself off among woodpeckers; but his behavior is
+ all crow. He frequents the higher pine belts, and has a noisy strident
+ call like a jay's, and how clean he and the frisk-tailed chipmunks keep
+ the camp! No crumb or paring or bit of eggshell goes amiss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ High as the camp may be, so it is not above timberline, it is not too high
+ for the coyote, the bobcat, or the wolf. It is the complaint of the
+ ordinary camper that the woods are too still, depleted of wild life. But
+ what dead body of wild thing, or neglected game untouched by its kind, do
+ you find? And put out offal away from camp over night, and look next day
+ at the foot tracks where it lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man is a great blunderer going about in the woods, and there is no other
+ except the bear makes so much noise. Being so well warned beforehand, it
+ is a very stupid animal, or a very bold one, that cannot keep safely hid.
+ The cunningest hunter is hunted in turn, and what he leaves of his kill is
+ meat for some other. That is the economy of nature, but with it all there
+ is not sufficient account taken of the works of man. There is no scavenger
+ that eats tin cans, and no wild thing leaves a like disfigurement on the
+ forest floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE POCKET HUNTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I remember very well when I first met him. Walking in the evening glow to
+ spy the marriages of the white gilias, I sniffed the unmistakable odor of
+ burning sage. It is a smell that carries far and indicates usually the
+ nearness of a campoodie, but on the level mesa nothing taller showed than
+ Diana's sage. Over the tops of it, beginning to dusk under a young white
+ moon, trailed a wavering ghost of smoke, and at the end of it I came upon
+ the Pocket Hunter making a dry camp in the friendly scrub. He sat
+ tailor-wise in the sand, with his coffee-pot on the coals, his supper
+ ready to hand in the frying-pan, and himself in a mood for talk. His pack
+ burros in hobbles strayed off to hunt for a wetter mouthful than the sage
+ afforded, and gave him no concern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We came upon him often after that, threading the windy passes, or by
+ water-holes in the desert hills, and got to know much of his way of life.
+ He was a small, bowed man, with a face and manner and speech of no
+ character at all, as if he had that faculty of small hunted things of
+ taking on the protective color of his surroundings. His clothes were of no
+ fashion that I could remember, except that they bore liberal markings of
+ pot black, and he had a curious fashion of going about with his mouth
+ open, which gave him a vacant look until you came near enough to perceive
+ him busy about an endless hummed, wordless tune. He traveled far and took
+ a long time to it, but the simplicity of his kitchen arrangements was
+ elemental. A pot for beans, a coffee-pot, a frying-pan, a tin to mix bread
+ in&mdash;he fed the burros in this when there was need&mdash;with these he
+ had been half round our western world and back. He explained to me very
+ early in our acquaintance what was good to take to the hills for food:
+ nothing sticky, for that "dirtied the pots;" nothing with "juice" to it,
+ for that would not pack to advantage; and nothing likely to ferment. He
+ used no gun, but he would set snares by the water-holes for quail and
+ doves, and in the trout country he carried a line. Burros he kept, one or
+ two according to his pack, for this chief excellence, that they would eat
+ potato parings and firewood. He had owned a horse in the foothill country,
+ but when he came to the desert with no forage but mesquite, he found
+ himself under the necessity of picking the beans from the briers, a labor
+ that drove him to the use of pack animals to whom thorns were a relish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I suppose no man becomes a pocket hunter by first intention. He must be
+ born with the faculty, and along comes the occasion, like the tap on the
+ test tube that induces crystallization. My friend had been several things
+ of no moment until he struck a thousand-dollar pocket in the Lee District
+ and came into his vocation. A pocket, you must know, is a small body of
+ rich ore occurring by itself, or in a vein of poorer stuff. Nearly every
+ mineral ledge contains such, if only one has the luck to hit upon them
+ without too much labor. The sensible thing for a man to do who has found a
+ good pocket is to buy himself into business and keep away from the hills.
+ The logical thing is to set out looking for another one. My friend the
+ Pocket Hunter had been looking twenty years. His working outfit was a
+ shovel, a pick, a gold pan which he kept cleaner than his plate, and a
+ pocket magnifier. When he came to a watercourse he would pan out the
+ gravel of its bed for "colors," and under the glass determine if they had
+ come from far or near, and so spying he would work up the stream until he
+ found where the drift of the gold-bearing outcrop fanned out into the
+ creek; then up the side of the canon till he came to the proper vein. I
+ think he said the best indication of small pockets was an iron stain, but
+ I could never get the run of miner's talk enough to feel instructed for
+ pocket hunting. He had another method in the waterless hills, where he
+ would work in and out of blind gullies and all windings of the manifold
+ strata that appeared not to have cooled since they had been heaved up. His
+ itinerary began with the east slope of the Sierras of the Snows, where
+ that range swings across to meet the coast hills, and all up that slope to
+ the Truckee River country, where the long cold forbade his progress north.
+ Then he worked back down one or another of the nearly parallel ranges that
+ lie out desertward, and so down to the sink of the Mojave River, burrowing
+ to oblivion in the sand,&mdash;a big mysterious land, a lonely,
+ inhospitable land, beautiful, terrible. But he came to no harm in it; the
+ land tolerated him as it might a gopher or a badger. Of all its
+ inhabitants it has the least concern for man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are many strange sorts of humans bred in a mining country, each sort
+ despising the queernesses of the other, but of them all I found the Pocket
+ Hunter most acceptable for his clean, companionable talk. There was more
+ color to his reminiscences than the faded sandy old miners "kyoteing,"
+ that is, tunneling like a coyote (kyote in the vernacular) in the core of
+ a lonesome hill. Such a one has found, perhaps, a body of tolerable ore in
+ a poor lead,&mdash;remember that I can never be depended on to get the
+ terms right,&mdash;and followed it into the heart of country rock to no
+ profit, hoping, burrowing, and hoping. These men go harmlessly mad in
+ time, believing themselves just behind the wall of fortune&mdash;most
+ likable and simple men, for whom it is well to do any kindly thing that
+ occurs to you except lend them money. I have known "grub stakers" too,
+ those persuasive sinners to whom you make allowances of flour and pork and
+ coffee in consideration of the ledges they are about to find; but none of
+ these proved so much worth while as the Pocket Hunter. He wanted nothing
+ of you and maintained a cheerful preference for his own way of life. It
+ was an excellent way if you had the constitution for it. The Pocket Hunter
+ had gotten to that point where he knew no bad weather, and all places were
+ equally happy so long as they were out of doors. I do not know just how
+ long it takes to become saturated with the elements so that one takes no
+ account of them. Myself can never get past the glow and exhilaration of a
+ storm, the wrestle of long dust-heavy winds, the play of live thunder on
+ the rocks, nor past the keen fret of fatigue when the storm outlasts
+ physical endurance. But prospectors and Indians get a kind of a weather
+ shell that remains on the body until death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pocket Hunter had seen destruction by the violence of nature and the
+ violence of men, and felt himself in the grip of an All-wisdom that killed
+ men or spared them as seemed for their good; but of death by sickness he
+ knew nothing except that he believed he should never suffer it. He had
+ been in Grape-vine Canon the year of storms that changed the whole front
+ of the mountain. All day he had come down under the wing of the storm,
+ hoping to win past it, but finding it traveling with him until night. It
+ kept on after that, he supposed, a steady downpour, but could not with
+ certainty say, being securely deep in sleep. But the weather instinct does
+ not sleep. In the night the heavens behind the hill dissolved in rain, and
+ the roar of the storm was borne in and mixed with his dreaming, so that it
+ moved him, still asleep, to get up and out of the path of it. What finally
+ woke him was the crash of pine logs as they went down before the unbridled
+ flood, and the swirl of foam that lashed him where he clung in the tangle
+ of scrub while the wall of water went by. It went on against the cabin of
+ Bill Gerry and laid Bill stripped and broken on a sand bar at the mouth of
+ the Grape-vine, seven miles away. There, when the sun was up and the wrath
+ of the rain spent, the Pocket Hunter found and buried him; but he never
+ laid his own escape at any door but the unintelligible favor of the
+ Powers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The journeyings of the Pocket Hunter led him often into that mysterious
+ country beyond Hot Creek where a hidden force works mischief, mole-like,
+ under the crust of the earth. Whatever agency is at work in that
+ neighborhood, and it is popularly supposed to be the devil, it changes
+ means and direction without time or season. It creeps up whole hillsides
+ with insidious heat, unguessed until one notes the pine woods dying at the
+ top, and having scorched out a good block of timber returns to steam and
+ spout in caked, forgotten crevices of years before. It will break up
+ sometimes blue-hot and bubbling, in the midst of a clear creek, or make a
+ sucking, scalding quicksand at the ford. These outbreaks had the kind of
+ morbid interest for the Pocket Hunter that a house of unsavory reputation
+ has in a respectable neighborhood, but I always found the accounts he
+ brought me more interesting than his explanations, which were compounded
+ of fag ends of miner's talk and superstition. He was a perfect gossip of
+ the woods, this Pocket Hunter, and when I could get him away from "leads"
+ and "strikes" and "contacts," full of fascinating small talk about the ebb
+ and flood of creeks, the pinon crop on Black Mountain, and the wolves of
+ Mesquite Valley. I suppose he never knew how much he depended for the
+ necessary sense of home and companionship on the beasts and trees, meeting
+ and finding them in their wonted places,&mdash;the bear that used to come
+ down Pine Creek in the spring, pawing out trout from the shelters of sod
+ banks, the juniper at Lone Tree Spring, and the quail at Paddy Jack's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a place on Waban, south of White Mountain, where flat,
+ wind-tilted cedars make low tents and coves of shade and shelter, where
+ the wild sheep winter in the snow. Woodcutters and prospectors had brought
+ me word of that, but the Pocket Hunter was accessory to the fact. About
+ the opening of winter, when one looks for sudden big storms, he had
+ attempted a crossing by the nearest path, beginning the ascent at noon. It
+ grew cold, the snow came on thick and blinding, and wiped out the trail in
+ a white smudge; the storm drift blew in and cut off landmarks, the early
+ dark obscured the rising drifts. According to the Pocket Hunter's account,
+ he knew where he was, but couldn't exactly say. Three days before he had
+ been in the west arm of Death Valley on a short water allowance,
+ ankle-deep in shifty sand; now he was on the rise of Waban, knee-deep in
+ sodden snow, and in both cases he did the only allowable thing&mdash;he
+ walked on. That is the only thing to do in a snowstorm in any case. It
+ might have been the creature instinct, which in his way of life had room
+ to grow, that led him to the cedar shelter; at any rate he found it about
+ four hours after dark, and heard the heavy breathing of the flock. He said
+ that if he thought at all at this juncture he must have thought that he
+ had stumbled on a storm-belated shepherd with his silly sheep; but in fact
+ he took no note of anything but the warmth of packed fleeces, and snuggled
+ in between them dead with sleep. If the flock stirred in the night he
+ stirred drowsily to keep close and let the storm go by. That was all until
+ morning woke him shining on a white world. Then the very soul of him shook
+ to see the wild sheep of God stand up about him, nodding their great horns
+ beneath the cedar roof, looking out on the wonder of the snow. They had
+ moved a little away from him with the coming of the light, but paid him no
+ more heed. The light broadened and the white pavilions of the snow swam in
+ the heavenly blueness of the sea from which they rose. The cloud drift
+ scattered and broke billowing in the canons. The leader stamped lightly on
+ the litter to put the flock in motion, suddenly they took the drifts in
+ those long light leaps that are nearest to flight, down and away on the
+ slopes of Waban. Think of that to happen to a Pocket Hunter! But though he
+ had fallen on many a wished-for hap, he was curiously inapt at getting the
+ truth about beasts in general. He believed in the venom of toads, and
+ charms for snake bites, and&mdash;for this I could never forgive him&mdash;had
+ all the miner's prejudices against my friend the coyote. Thief, sneak, and
+ son of a thief were the friendliest words he had for this little gray dog
+ of the wilderness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course with so much seeking he came occasionally upon pockets of more
+ or less value, otherwise he could not have kept up his way of life; but he
+ had as much luck in missing great ledges as in finding small ones. He had
+ been all over the Tonopah country, and brought away float without
+ happening upon anything that gave promise of what that district was to
+ become in a few years. He claimed to have chipped bits off the very
+ outcrop of the California Rand, without finding it worth while to bring
+ away, but none of these things put him out of countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was once in roving weather, when we found him shifting pack on a steep
+ trail, that I observed certain of his belongings done up in green canvas
+ bags, the veritable "green bag" of English novels. It seemed so
+ incongruous a reminder in this untenanted West that I dropped down beside
+ the trail overlooking the vast dim valley, to hear about the green canvas.
+ He had gotten it, he said, in London years before, and that was the first
+ I had known of his having been abroad. It was after one of his "big
+ strikes" that he had made the Grand Tour, and had brought nothing away
+ from it but the green canvas bags, which he conceived would fit his needs,
+ and an ambition. This last was nothing less than to strike it rich and set
+ himself up among the eminently bourgeois of London. It seemed that the
+ situation of the wealthy English middle class, with just enough gentility
+ above to aspire to, and sufficient smaller fry to bully and patronize,
+ appealed to his imagination, though of course he did not put it so crudely
+ as that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was no news to me then, two or three years after, to learn that he had
+ taken ten thousand dollars from an abandoned claim, just the sort of luck
+ to have pleased him, and gone to London to spend it. The land seemed not
+ to miss him any more than it had minded him, but I missed him and could
+ not forget the trick of expecting him in least likely situations.
+ Therefore it was with a pricking sense of the familiar that I followed a
+ twilight trail of smoke, a year or two later, to the swale of a dripping
+ spring, and came upon a man by the fire with a coffee-pot and frying-pan.
+ I was not surprised to find it was the Pocket Hunter. No man can be
+ stronger than his destiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SHOSHONE LAND
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is true I have been in Shoshone Land, but before that, long before, I
+ had seen it through the eyes of Winnenap' in a rosy mist of reminiscence,
+ and must always see it with a sense of intimacy in the light that never
+ was. Sitting on the golden slope at the campoodie, looking across the
+ Bitter Lake to the purple tops of Mutarango, the medicine-man drew up its
+ happy places one by one, like little blessed islands in a sea of talk. For
+ he was born a Shoshone, was Winnenap'; and though his name, his wife, his
+ children, and his tribal relations were of the Paiutes, his thoughts
+ turned homesickly toward Shoshone Land. Once a Shoshone always a Shoshone.
+ Winnenap' lived gingerly among the Paiutes and in his heart despised them.
+ But he could speak a tolerable English when he would, and he always would
+ if it were of Shoshone Land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had come into the keeping of the Paiutes as a hostage for the long
+ peace which the authority of the whites made interminable, and, though
+ there was now no order in the tribe, nor any power that could have
+ lawfully restrained him, kept on in the old usage, to save his honor and
+ the word of his vanished kin. He had seen his children's children in the
+ borders of the Paiutes, but loved best his own miles of sand and
+ rainbow-painted hills. Professedly he had not seen them since the
+ beginning of his hostage; but every year about the end of the rains and
+ before the strength of the sun had come upon us from the south, the
+ medicine-man went apart on the mountains to gather herbs, and when he came
+ again I knew by the new fortitude of his countenance and the new color of
+ his reminiscences that he had been alone and unspied upon in Shoshone
+ Land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To reach that country from the campoodie, one goes south and south, within
+ hearing of the lip-lip-lapping of the great tideless lake, and south by
+ east over a high rolling district, miles and miles of sage and nothing
+ else. So one comes to the country of the painted hills,&mdash;old red
+ cones of craters, wasteful beds of mineral earths, hot, acrid springs, and
+ steam jets issuing from a leprous soil. After the hills the black rock,
+ after the craters the spewed lava, ash strewn, of incredible thickness,
+ and full of sharp, winding rifts. There are picture writings carved deep
+ in the face of the cliffs to mark the way for those who do not know it. On
+ the very edge of the black rock the earth falls away in a wide sweeping
+ hollow, which is Shoshone Land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ South the land rises in very blue hills, blue because thickly wooded with
+ ceanothus and manzanita, the haunt of deer and the border of the
+ Shoshones. Eastward the land goes very far by broken ranges, narrow
+ valleys of pure desertness, and huge mesas uplifted to the sky-line, east
+ and east, and no man knows the end of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the country of the bighorn, the wapiti, and the wolf, nesting place
+ of buzzards, land of cloud-nourished trees and wild things that live
+ without drink. Above all, it is the land of the creosote and the mesquite.
+ The mesquite is God's best thought in all this desertness. It grows in the
+ open, is thorny, stocky, close grown, and iron-rooted. Long winds move in
+ the draughty valleys, blown sand fills and fills about the lower branches,
+ piling pyramidal dunes, from the top of which the mesquite twigs flourish
+ greenly. Fifteen or twenty feet under the drift, where it seems no rain
+ could penetrate, the main trunk grows, attaining often a yard's thickness,
+ resistant as oak. In Shoshone Land one digs for large timber; that is in
+ the southerly, sandy exposures. Higher on the table-topped ranges low
+ trees of juniper and pinon stand each apart, rounded and spreading heaps
+ of greenness. Between them, but each to itself in smooth clear spaces,
+ tufts of tall feathered grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the sense of the desert hills, that there is room enough and time
+ enough. Trees grow to consummate domes; every plant has its perfect work.
+ Noxious weeds such as come up thickly in crowded fields do not flourish in
+ the free spaces. Live long enough with an Indian, and he or the wild
+ things will show you a use for everything that grows in these borders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The manner of the country makes the usage of life there, and the land will
+ not be lived in except in its own fashion. The Shoshones live like their
+ trees, with great spaces between, and in pairs and in family groups they
+ set up wattled huts by the infrequent springs. More wickiups than two make
+ a very great number. Their shelters are lightly built, for they travel
+ much and far, following where deer feed and seeds ripen, but they are not
+ more lonely than other creatures that inhabit there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The year's round is somewhat in this fashion. After the pinon harvest the
+ clans foregather on a warm southward slope for the annual adjustment of
+ tribal difficulties and the medicine dance, for marriage and mourning and
+ vengeance, and the exchange of serviceable information; if, for example,
+ the deer have shifted their feeding ground, if the wild sheep have come
+ back to Waban, or certain springs run full or dry. Here the Shoshones
+ winter flockwise, weaving baskets and hunting big game driven down from
+ the country of the deep snow. And this brief intercourse is all the use
+ they have of their kind, for now there are no wars, and many of their
+ ancient crafts have fallen into disuse. The solitariness of the life
+ breeds in the men, as in the plants, a certain well-roundedness and
+ sufficiency to its own ends. Any Shoshone family has in itself the
+ man-seed, power to multiply and replenish, potentialities for food and
+ clothing and shelter, for healing and beautifying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the rain is over and gone they are stirred by the instinct of those
+ that journeyed eastward from Eden, and go up each with his mate and young
+ brood, like birds to old nesting places. The beginning of spring in
+ Shoshone Land&mdash;oh the soft wonder of it!&mdash;is a mistiness as of
+ incense smoke, a veil of greenness over the whitish stubby shrubs, a web
+ of color on the silver sanded soil. No counting covers the multitude of
+ rayed blossoms that break suddenly underfoot in the brief season of the
+ winter rains, with silky furred or prickly viscid foliage, or no foliage
+ at all. They are morning and evening bloomers chiefly, and strong seeders.
+ Years of scant rains they lie shut and safe in the winnowed sands, so that
+ some species appear to be extinct. Years of long storms they break so
+ thickly into bloom that no horse treads without crushing them. These years
+ the gullies of the hills are rank with fern and a great tangle of climbing
+ vines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as the mesa twilights have their vocal note in the love call of the
+ burrowing owl, so the desert spring is voiced by the mourning doves.
+ Welcome and sweet they sound in the smoky mornings before breeding time,
+ and where they frequent in any great numbers water is confidently looked
+ for. Still by the springs one finds the cunning brush shelters from which
+ the Shoshones shot arrows at them when the doves came to drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as to these same Shoshones there are some who claim that they have no
+ right to the name, which belongs to a more northerly tribe; but that is
+ the word they will be called by, and there is no greater offense than to
+ call an Indian out of his name. According to their traditions and all
+ proper evidence, they were a great people occupying far north and east of
+ their present bounds, driven thence by the Paiutes. Between the two tribes
+ is the residuum of old hostilities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Winnenap', whose memory ran to the time when the boundary of the Paiute
+ country was a dead-line to Shoshones, told me once how himself and another
+ lad, in an unforgotten spring, discovered a nesting place of buzzards a
+ bit of a way beyond the borders. And they two burned to rob those nests.
+ Oh, for no purpose at all except as boys rob nests immemorially, for the
+ fun of it, to have and handle and show to other lads as an exceeding
+ treasure, and afterwards discard. So, not quite meaning to, but breathless
+ with daring, they crept up a gully, across a sage brush flat and through a
+ waste of boulders, to the rugged pines where their sharp eyes had made out
+ the buzzards settling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The medicine-man told me, always with a quaking relish at this point, that
+ while they, grown bold by success, were still in the tree, they sighted a
+ Paiute hunting party crossing between them and their own land. That was
+ mid-morning, and all day on into the dark the boys crept and crawled and
+ slid, from boulder to bush, and bush to boulder, in cactus scrub and on
+ naked sand, always in a sweat of fear, until the dust caked in the
+ nostrils and the breath sobbed in the body, around and away many a mile
+ until they came to their own land again. And all the time Winnenap'
+ carried those buzzard's eggs in the slack of his single buckskin garment!
+ Young Shoshones are like young quail, knowing without teaching about
+ feeding and hiding, and learning what civilized children never learn, to
+ be still and to keep on being still, at the first hint of danger or
+ strangeness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for food, that appears to be chiefly a matter of being willing. Desert
+ Indians all eat chuckwallas, big black and white lizards that have
+ delicate white flesh savored like chicken. Both the Shoshones and the
+ coyotes are fond of the flesh of Gopherus agassizii, the turtle that by
+ feeding on buds, going without drink, and burrowing in the sand through
+ the winter, contrives to live a known period of twenty-five years. It
+ seems that most seeds are foodful in the arid regions, most berries
+ edible, and many shrubs good for firewood with the sap in them. The
+ mesquite bean, whether the screw or straight pod, pounded to a meal,
+ boiled to a kind of mush, and dried in cakes, sulphur-colored and needing
+ an axe to cut it, is an excellent food for long journeys. Fermented in
+ water with wild honey and the honeycomb, it makes a pleasant, mildly
+ intoxicating drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to spring, the best time to visit Shoshone Land is when the deer-star
+ hangs low and white like a torch over the morning hills. Go up past
+ Winnedumah and down Saline and up again to the rim of Mesquite Valley.
+ Take no tent, but if you will, have an Indian build you a wickiup, willows
+ planted in a circle, drawn over to an arch, and bound cunningly with
+ withes, all the leaves on, and chinks to count the stars through. But
+ there was never any but Winnenap' who could tell and make it worth telling
+ about Shoshone Land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Winnenap' will not any more. He died, as do most medicine-men of the
+ Paiutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where the lot falls when the campoodie chooses a medicine-man there it
+ rests. It is an honor a man seldom seeks but must wear, an honor with a
+ condition. When three patients die under his ministrations, the
+ medicine-man must yield his life and his office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wounds do not count; broken bones and bullet holes the Indian can
+ understand, but measles, pneumonia, and smallpox are witchcraft. Winnenap'
+ was medicine-man for fifteen years. Besides considerable skill in healing
+ herbs, he used his prerogatives cunningly. It is permitted the
+ medicine-man to decline the case when the patient has had treatment from
+ any other, say the white doctor, whom many of the younger generation
+ consult. Or, if before having seen the patient, he can definitely refer
+ his disorder to some supernatural cause wholly out of the medicine-man's
+ jurisdiction, say to the spite of an evil spirit going about in the form
+ of a coyote, and states the case convincingly, he may avoid the penalty.
+ But this must not be pushed too far. All else failing, he can hide.
+ Winnenap' did this the time of the measles epidemic. Returning from his
+ yearly herb gathering, he heard of it at Black Rock, and turning aside, he
+ was not to be found, nor did he return to his own place until the disease
+ had spent itself, and half the children of the campoodie were in their
+ shallow graves with beads sprinkled over them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is possible the tale of Winnenap's patients had not been strictly kept.
+ There had not been a medicine-man killed in the valley for twelve years,
+ and for that the perpetrators had been severely punished by the whites.
+ The winter of the Big Snow an epidemic of pneumonia carried off the
+ Indians with scarcely a warning; from the lake northward to the lava flats
+ they died in the sweathouses, and under the hands of the medicine-men.
+ Even the drugs of the white physician had no power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After two weeks of this plague the Paiutes drew to council to consider the
+ remissness of their medicine-men. They were sore with grief and afraid for
+ themselves; as a result of the council, one in every campoodie was
+ sentenced to the ancient penalty. But schooling and native shrewdness had
+ raised up in the younger men an unfaith in old usages, so judgment halted
+ between sentence and execution. At Three Pines the government teacher
+ brought out influential whites to threaten and cajole the stubborn tribes.
+ At Tunawai the conservatives sent into Nevada for that pacific old humbug,
+ Johnson Sides, most notable of Paiute orators, to harangue his people.
+ Citizens of the towns turned out with food and comforts, and so after a
+ season the trouble passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here at Maverick there was no school, no oratory, and no alleviation.
+ One third of the campoodie died, and the rest killed the medicine-men.
+ Winnenap' expected it, and for days walked and sat a little apart from his
+ family that he might meet it as became a Shoshone, no doubt suffering the
+ agony of dread deferred. When finally three men came and sat at his fire
+ without greeting he knew his time. He turned a little from them, dropped
+ his chin upon his knees, and looked out over Shoshone Land, breathing
+ evenly. The women went into the wickiup and covered their heads with their
+ blankets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much has the Indian lost of savageness by merely desisting from
+ killing, that the executioners braved themselves to their work by drinking
+ and a show of quarrelsomeness. In the end a sharp hatchet-stroke
+ discharged the duty of the campoodie. Afterward his women buried him, and
+ a warm wind coming out of the south, the force of the disease was broken,
+ and even they acquiesced in the wisdom of the tribe. That summer they told
+ me all except the names of the Three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since it appears that we make our own heaven here, no doubt we shall have
+ a hand in the heaven of hereafter; and I know what Winnenap's will be
+ like: worth going to if one has leave to live in it according to his
+ liking. It will be tawny gold underfoot, walled up with jacinth and
+ jasper, ribbed with chalcedony, and yet no hymnbook heaven, but the free
+ air and free spaces of Shoshone Land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ JIMVILLE
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A BRET HARTE TOWN
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ When Mr. Harte found himself with a fresh palette and his particular local
+ color fading from the West, he did what he considered the only safe thing,
+ and carried his young impression away to be worked out untroubled by any
+ newer fact. He should have gone to Jimville. There he would have found
+ cast up on the ore-ribbed hills the bleached timbers of more tales, and
+ better ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You could not think of Jimville as anything more than a survival, like the
+ herb-eating, bony-cased old tortoise that pokes cheerfully about those
+ borders some thousands of years beyond his proper epoch. Not that Jimville
+ is old, but it has an atmosphere favorable to the type of a half century
+ back, if not "forty-niners," of that breed. It is said of Jimville that
+ getting away from it is such a piece of work that it encourages permanence
+ in the population; the fact is that most have been drawn there by some
+ real likeness or liking. Not however that I would deny the difficulty of
+ getting into or out of that cove of reminder, I who have made the journey
+ so many times at great pains of a poor body. Any way you go at it,
+ Jimville is about three days from anywhere in particular. North or south,
+ after the railroad there is a stage journey of such interminable monotony
+ as induces forgetfulness of all previous states of existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The road to Jimville is the happy hunting ground of old stage-coaches
+ bought up from superseded routes the West over, rocking, lumbering, wide
+ vehicles far gone in the odor of romance, coaches that Vasquez has held
+ up, from whose high seats express messengers have shot or been shot as
+ their luck held. This is to comfort you when the driver stops to rummage
+ for wire to mend a failing bolt. There is enough of this sort of thing to
+ quite prepare you to believe what the driver insists, namely, that all
+ that country and Jimville are held together by wire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First on the way to Jimville you cross a lonely open land, with a hint in
+ the sky of things going on under the horizon, a palpitant, white, hot land
+ where the wheels gird at the sand and the midday heaven shuts it in
+ breathlessly like a tent. So in still weather; and when the wind blows
+ there is occupation enough for the passengers, shifting seats to hold down
+ the windward side of the wagging coach. This is a mere trifle. The
+ Jimville stage is built for five passengers, but when you have seven, with
+ four trunks, several parcels, three sacks of grain, the mail and express,
+ you begin to understand that proverb about the road which has been
+ reported to you. In time you learn to engage the high seat beside the
+ driver, where you get good air and the best company. Beyond the desert
+ rise the lava flats, scoriae strewn; sharp-cutting walls of narrow canons;
+ league-wide, frozen puddles of black rock, intolerable and forbidding.
+ Beyond the lava the mouths that spewed it out, ragged-lipped, ruined
+ craters shouldering to the cloud-line, mostly of red earth, as red as a
+ red heifer. These have some comforting of shrubs and grass. You get the
+ very spirit of the meaning of that country when you see Little Pete
+ feeding his sheep in the red, choked maw of an old vent,&mdash;a kind of
+ silly pastoral gentleness that glozes over an elemental violence. Beyond
+ the craters rise worn, auriferous hills of a quiet sort, tumbled together;
+ a valley full of mists; whitish green scrub; and bright, small, panting
+ lizards; then Jimville.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The town looks to have spilled out of Squaw Gulch, and that, in fact, is
+ the sequence of its growth. It began around the Bully Boy and Theresa
+ group of mines midway up Squaw Gulch, spreading down to the smelter at the
+ mouth of the ravine. The freight wagons dumped their loads as near to the
+ mill as the slope allowed, and Jimville grew in between. Above the Gulch
+ begins a pine wood with sparsely grown thickets of lilac, azalea, and
+ odorous blossoming shrubs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Squaw Gulch is a very sharp, steep, ragged-walled ravine, and that part of
+ Jimville which is built in it has only one street,&mdash;in summer paved
+ with bone-white cobbles, in the wet months a frothy yellow flood. All
+ between the ore dumps and solitary small cabins, pieced out with tin cans
+ and packing cases, run footpaths drawing down to the Silver Dollar saloon.
+ When Jimville was having the time of its life the Silver Dollar had those
+ same coins let into the bar top for a border, but the proprietor pried
+ them out when the glory departed. There are three hundred inhabitants in
+ Jimville and four bars, though you are not to argue anything from that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hear now how Jimville came by its name. Jim Calkins discovered the Bully
+ Boy, Jim Baker located the Theresa. When Jim Jenkins opened an
+ eating-house in his tent he chalked up on the flap, "Best meals in
+ Jimville, $1.00," and the name stuck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was more human interest in the origin of Squaw Gulch, though it
+ tickled no humor. It was Dimmick's squaw from Aurora way. If Dimmick had
+ been anything except New Englander he would have called her a mahala, but
+ that would not have bettered his behavior. Dimmick made a strike, went
+ East, and the squaw who had been to him as his wife took to drink. That
+ was the bald way of stating it in the Aurora country. The milk of human
+ kindness, like some wine, must not be uncorked too much in speech lest it
+ lose savor. This is what they did. The woman would have returned to her
+ own people, being far gone with child, but the drink worked her bane. By
+ the river of this ravine her pains overtook her. There Jim Calkins,
+ prospecting, found her dying with a three days' babe nozzling at her
+ breast. Jim heartened her for the end, buried her, and walked back to
+ Poso, eighteen miles, the child poking in the folds of his denim shirt
+ with small mewing noises, and won support for it from the rough-handed
+ folks of that place. Then he came back to Squaw Gulch, so named from that
+ day, and discovered the Bully Boy. Jim humbly regarded this piece of luck
+ as interposed for his reward, and I for one believed him. If it had been
+ in mediaeval times you would have had a legend or a ballad. Bret Harte
+ would have given you a tale. You see in me a mere recorder, for I know
+ what is best for you; you shall blow out this bubble from your own breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You could never get into any proper relation to Jimville unless you could
+ slough off and swallow your acquired prejudices as a lizard does his skin.
+ Once wanting some womanly attentions, the stage-driver assured me I might
+ have them at the Nine-Mile House from the lady barkeeper. The phrase
+ tickled all my after-dinner-coffee sense of humor into an anticipation of
+ Poker Flat. The stage-driver proved himself really right, though you are
+ not to suppose from this that Jimville had no conventions and no caste.
+ They work out these things in the personal equation largely. Almost every
+ latitude of behavior is allowed a good fellow, one no liar, a free
+ spender, and a backer of his friends' quarrels. You are respected in as
+ much ground as you can shoot over, in as many pretensions as you can make
+ good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That probably explains Mr. Fanshawe, the gentlemanly faro dealer of those
+ parts, built for the role of Oakhurst, going white-shirted and
+ frock-coated in a community of overalls; and persuading you that whatever
+ shifts and tricks of the game were laid to his deal, he could not practice
+ them on a person of your penetration. But he does. By his own account and
+ the evidence of his manners he had been bred for a clergyman, and he
+ certainly has gifts for the part. You find him always in possession of
+ your point of view, and with an evident though not obtrusive desire to
+ stand well with you. For an account of his killings, for his way with
+ women and the way of women with him, I refer you to Brown of Calaveras and
+ some others of that stripe. His improprieties had a certain sanction of
+ long standing not accorded to the gay ladies who wore Mr. Fanshawe's
+ favors. There were perhaps too many of them. On the whole, the point of
+ the moral distinctions of Jimville appears to be a point of honor, with an
+ absence of humorous appreciation that strangers mistake for dullness. At
+ Jimville they see behavior as history and judge it by facts, untroubled by
+ invention and the dramatic sense. You glimpse a crude equity in their
+ dealings with Wilkins, who had shot a man at Lone Tree, fairly, in an open
+ quarrel. Rumor of it reached Jimville before Wilkins rested there in
+ flight. I saw Wilkins, all Jimville saw him; in fact, he came into the
+ Silver Dollar when we were holding a church fair and bought a pink silk
+ pincushion. I have often wondered what became of it. Some of us shook
+ hands with him, not because we did not know, but because we had not been
+ officially notified, and there were those present who knew how it was
+ themselves. When the sheriff arrived Wilkins had moved on, and Jimville
+ organized a posse and brought him back, because the sheriff was a Jimville
+ man and we had to stand by him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said we had the church fair at the Silver Dollar. We had most things
+ there, dances, town meetings, and the kinetoscope exhibition of the
+ Passion Play. The Silver Dollar had been built when the borders of
+ Jimville spread from Minton to the red hill the Defiance twisted through.
+ "Side-Winder" Smith scrubbed the floor for us and moved the bar to the
+ back room. The fair was designed for the support of the circuit rider who
+ preached to the few that would hear, and buried us all in turn. He was the
+ symbol of Jimville's respectability, although he was of a sect that held
+ dancing among the cardinal sins. The management took no chances on
+ offending the minister; at 11.30 they tendered him the receipts of the
+ evening in the chairman's hat, as a delicate intimation that the fair was
+ closed. The company filed out of the front door and around to the back.
+ Then the dance began formally with no feelings hurt. These were the sort
+ of courtesies, common enough in Jimville, that brought tears of delicate
+ inner laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were others besides Mr. Fanshawe who had walked out of Mr. Harte's
+ demesne to Jimville and wore names that smacked of the soil,&mdash;"Alkali
+ Bill," "Pike" Wilson, "Three Finger," and "Mono Jim;" fierce, shy,
+ profane, sun-dried derelicts of the windy hills, who each owned, or had
+ owned, a mine and was wishful to own one again. They laid up on the worn
+ benches of the Silver Dollar or the Same Old Luck like beached vessels,
+ and their talk ran on endlessly of "strike" and "contact" and "mother
+ lode," and worked around to fights and hold-ups, villainy, haunts, and the
+ hoodoo of the Minietta, told austerely without imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do not suppose I am going to repeat it all; you who want these things
+ written up from the point of view of people who do not do them every day
+ would get no savor in their speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Says Three Finger, relating the history of the Mariposa, "I took it off'n
+ Tom Beatty, cheap, after his brother Bill was shot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Says Jim Jenkins, "What was the matter of him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who? Bill? Abe Johnson shot him; he was fooling around Johnson's wife,
+ an' Tom sold me the mine dirt cheap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why didn't he work it himself?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Him? Oh, he was laying for Abe and calculated to have to leave the
+ country pretty quick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Huh!" says Jim Jenkins, and the tale flows smoothly on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yearly the spring fret floats the loose population of Jimville out into
+ the desolate waste hot lands, guiding by the peaks and a few rarely
+ touched water-holes, always, always with the golden hope. They develop
+ prospects and grow rich, develop others and grow poor but never
+ embittered. Say the hills, It is all one, there is gold enough, time
+ enough, and men enough to come after you. And at Jimville they understand
+ the language of the hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jimville does not know a great deal about the crust of the earth, it
+ prefers a "hunch." That is an intimation from the gods that if you go over
+ a brown back of the hills, by a dripping spring, up Coso way, you will
+ find what is worth while. I have never heard that the failure of any
+ particular hunch disproved the principle. Somehow the rawness of the land
+ favors the sense of personal relation to the supernatural. There is not
+ much intervention of crops, cities, clothes, and manners between you and
+ the organizing forces to cut off communication. All this begets in
+ Jimville a state that passes explanation unless you will accept an
+ explanation that passes belief. Along with killing and drunkenness,
+ coveting of women, charity, simplicity, there is a certain indifference,
+ blankness, emptiness if you will, of all vaporings, no bubbling of the
+ pot,&mdash;it wants the German to coin a word for that,&mdash;no
+ bread-envy, no brother-fervor. Western writers have not sensed it yet;
+ they smack the savor of lawlessness too much upon their tongues, but you
+ have these to witness it is not mean-spiritedness. It is pure Greek in
+ that it represents the courage to sheer off what is not worth while.
+ Beyond that it endures without sniveling, renounces without self-pity,
+ fears no death, rates itself not too great in the scheme of things; so do
+ beasts, so did St. Jerome in the desert, so also in the elder day did
+ gods. Life, its performance, cessation, is no new thing to gape and wonder
+ at.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here you have the repose of the perfectly accepted instinct which includes
+ passion and death in its perquisites. I suppose that the end of all our
+ hammering and yawping will be something like the point of view of
+ Jimville. The only difference will be in the decorations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MY NEIGHBOR'S FIELD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is one of those places God must have meant for a field from all time,
+ lying very level at the foot of the slope that crowds up against
+ Kearsarge, falling slightly toward the town. North and south it is fenced
+ by low old glacial ridges, boulder strewn and untenable. Eastward it butts
+ on orchard closes and the village gardens, brimming over into them by wild
+ brier and creeping grass. The village street, with its double row of
+ unlike houses, breaks off abruptly at the edge of the field in a footpath
+ that goes up the streamside, beyond it, to the source of waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The field is not greatly esteemed of the town, not being put to the plough
+ nor affording firewood, but breeding all manner of wild seeds that go down
+ in the irrigating ditches to come up as weeds in the gardens and grass
+ plots. But when I had no more than seen it in the charm of its spring
+ smiling, I knew I should have no peace until I had bought ground and built
+ me a house beside it, with a little wicket to go in and out at all hours,
+ as afterward came about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edswick, Roeder, Connor, and Ruffin owned the field before it fell to my
+ neighbor. But before that the Paiutes, mesne lords of the soil, made a
+ campoodie by the rill of Pine Creek; and after, contesting the soil with
+ them, cattle-men, who found its foodful pastures greatly to their
+ advantage; and bands of blethering flocks shepherded by wild, hairy men of
+ little speech, who attested their rights to the feeding ground with their
+ long staves upon each other's skulls. Edswick homesteaded the field about
+ the time the wild tide of mining life was roaring and rioting up
+ Kearsarge, and where the village now stands built a stone hut, with
+ loopholes to make good his claim against cattlemen or Indians. But Edswick
+ died and Roeder became master of the field. Roeder owned cattle on a
+ thousand hills, and made it a recruiting ground for his bellowing herds
+ before beginning the long drive to market across a shifty desert. He kept
+ the field fifteen years, and afterward falling into difficulties, put it
+ out as security against certain sums. Connor, who held the securities, was
+ cleverer than Roeder and not so busy. The money fell due the winter of the
+ Big Snow, when all the trails were forty feet under drifts, and Roeder was
+ away in San Francisco selling his cattle. At the set time Connor took the
+ law by the forelock and was adjudged possession of the field. Eighteen
+ days later Roeder arrived on snowshoes, both feet frozen, and the money in
+ his pack. In the long suit at law ensuing, the field fell to Ruffin, that
+ clever one-armed lawyer with the tongue to wile a bird out of the bush,
+ Connor's counsel, and was sold by him to my neighbor, whom from envying
+ his possession I call Naboth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Curiously, all this human occupancy of greed and mischief left no mark on
+ the field, but the Indians did, and the unthinking sheep. Round its
+ corners children pick up chipped arrow points of obsidian, scattered
+ through it are kitchen middens and pits of old sweat-houses. By the south
+ corner, where the campoodie stood, is a single shrub of "hoopee" (Lycium
+ andersonii), maintaining itself hardly among alien shrubs, and near by,
+ three low rakish trees of hackberry, so far from home that no prying of
+ mine has been able to find another in any canon east or west. But the
+ berries of both were food for the Paiutes, eagerly sought and traded for
+ as far south as Shoshone Land. By the fork of the creek where the
+ shepherds camp is a single clump of mesquite of the variety called "screw
+ bean." The seed must have shaken there from some sheep's coat, for this is
+ not the habitat of mesquite, and except for other single shrubs at sheep
+ camps, none grows freely for a hundred and fifty miles south or east.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naboth has put a fence about the best of the field, but neither the
+ Indians nor the shepherds can quite forego it. They make camp and build
+ their wattled huts about the borders of it, and no doubt they have some
+ sense of home in its familiar aspect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I have said, it is a low-lying field, between the mesa and the town,
+ with no hillocks in it, but a gentle swale where the waste water of the
+ creek goes down to certain farms, and the hackberry-trees, of which the
+ tallest might be three times the height of a man, are the tallest things
+ in it. A mile up from the water gate that turns the creek into supply
+ pipes for the town, begins a row of long-leaved pines, threading the
+ watercourse to the foot of Kearsarge. These are the pines that puzzle the
+ local botanist, not easily determined, and unrelated to other conifers of
+ the Sierra slope; the same pines of which the Indians relate a legend
+ mixed of brotherliness and the retribution of God. Once the pines
+ possessed the field, as the worn stumps of them along the streamside show,
+ and it would seem their secret purpose to regain their old footing. Now
+ and then some seedling escapes the devastating sheep a rod or two
+ down-stream. Since I came to live by the field one of these has tiptoed
+ above the gully of the creek, beckoning the procession from the hills, as
+ if in fact they would make back toward that skyward-pointing finger of
+ granite on the opposite range, from which, according to the legend, when
+ they were bad Indians and it a great chief, they ran away. This year the
+ summer floods brought the round, brown, fruitful cones to my very door,
+ and I look, if I live long enough, to see them come up greenly in my
+ neighbor's field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is interesting to watch this retaking of old ground by the wild plants,
+ banished by human use. Since Naboth drew his fence about the field and
+ restricted it to a few wild-eyed steers, halting between the hills and the
+ shambles, many old habitues of the field have come back to their haunts.
+ The willow and brown birch, long ago cut off by the Indians for wattles,
+ have come back to the streamside, slender and virginal in their spring
+ greenness, and leaving long stretches of the brown water open to the sky.
+ In stony places where no grass grows, wild olives sprawl; close-twigged,
+ blue-gray patches in winter, more translucent greenish gold in spring than
+ any aureole. Along with willow and birch and brier, the clematis, that
+ shyest plant of water borders, slips down season by season to within a
+ hundred yards of the village street. Convinced after three years that it
+ would come no nearer, we spent time fruitlessly pulling up roots to plant
+ in the garden. All this while, when no coaxing or care prevailed upon any
+ transplanted slip to grow, one was coming up silently outside the fence
+ near the wicket, coiling so secretly in the rabbit-brush that its presence
+ was never suspected until it flowered delicately along its twining length.
+ The horehound comes through the fence and under it, shouldering the
+ pickets off the railings; the brier rose mines under the horehound; and no
+ care, though I own I am not a close weeder, keeps the small pale moons of
+ the primrose from rising to the night moth under my apple-trees. The first
+ summer in the new place, a clump of cypripediums came up by the irrigating
+ ditch at the bottom of the lawn. But the clematis will not come inside,
+ nor the wild almond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have forgotten to find out, though I meant to, whether the wild almond
+ grew in that country where Moses kept the flocks of his father-in-law, but
+ if so one can account for the burning bush. It comes upon one with a
+ flame-burst as of revelation; little hard red buds on leafless twigs,
+ swelling unnoticeably, then one, two, or three strong suns, and from tip
+ to tip one soft fiery glow, whispering with bees as a singing flame. A
+ twig of finger size will be furred to the thickness of one's wrist by pink
+ five-petaled bloom, so close that only the blunt-faced wild bees find
+ their way in it. In this latitude late frosts cut off the hope of fruit
+ too often for the wild almond to multiply greatly, but the spiny,
+ tap-rooted shrubs are resistant to most plant evils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not easy always to be attentive to the maturing of wild fruit.
+ Plants are so unobtrusive in their material processes, and always at the
+ significant moment some other bloom has reached its perfect hour. One can
+ never fix the precise moment when the rosy tint the field has from the
+ wild almond passes into the inspiring blue of lupines. One notices here
+ and there a spike of bloom, and a day later the whole field royal and
+ ruffling lightly to the wind. Part of the charm of the lupine is the
+ continual stir of its plumes to airs not suspected otherwhere. Go and
+ stand by any crown of bloom and the tall stalks do but rock a little as
+ for drowsiness, but look off across the field, and on the stillest days
+ there is always a trepidation in the purple patches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From midsummer until frost the prevailing note of the field is clear gold,
+ passing into the rusty tone of bigelovia going into a decline, a
+ succession of color schemes more admirably managed than the transformation
+ scene at the theatre. Under my window a colony of cleome made a soft web
+ of bloom that drew me every morning for a long still time; and one day I
+ discovered that I was looking into a rare fretwork of fawn and straw
+ colored twigs from which both bloom and leaf had gone, and I could not say
+ if it had been for a matter of weeks or days. The time to plant cucumbers
+ and set out cabbages may be set down in the almanac, but never seed-time
+ nor blossom in Naboth's field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain winged and mailed denizens of the field seem to reach their heyday
+ along with the plants they most affect. In June the leaning towers of the
+ white milkweed are jeweled over with red and gold beetles, climbing
+ dizzily. This is that milkweed from whose stems the Indians flayed fibre
+ to make snares for small game, but what use the beetles put it to except
+ for a displaying ground for their gay coats, I could never discover. The
+ white butterfly crop comes on with the bigelovia bloom, and on warm
+ mornings makes an airy twinkling all across the field. In September young
+ linnets grow out of the rabbit-brush in the night. All the nests
+ discoverable in the neighboring orchards will not account for the numbers
+ of them. Somewhere, by the same secret process by which the field matures
+ a million more seeds than it needs, it is maturing red-hooded linnets for
+ their devouring. All the purlieus of bigelovia and artemisia are noisy
+ with them for a month. Suddenly as they come as suddenly go the
+ fly-by-nights, that pitch and toss on dusky barred wings above the field
+ of summer twilights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never one of these nighthawks will you see after linnet time, though the
+ hurtle of their wings makes a pleasant sound across the dusk in their
+ season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For two summers a great red-tailed hawk has visited the field every
+ afternoon between three and four o'clock, swooping and soaring with the
+ airs of a gentleman adventurer. What he finds there is chiefly
+ conjectured, so secretive are the little people of Naboth's field. Only
+ when leaves fall and the light is low and slant, one sees the long clean
+ flanks of the jackrabbits, leaping like small deer, and of late afternoons
+ little cotton-tails scamper in the runways. But the most one sees of the
+ burrowers, gophers, and mice is the fresh earthwork of their newly opened
+ doors, or the pitiful small shreds the butcher-bird hangs on spiny shrubs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a still field, this of my neighbor's, though so busy, and admirably
+ compounded for variety and pleasantness,&mdash;a little sand, a little
+ loam, a grassy plot, a stony rise or two, a full brown stream, a little
+ touch of humanness, a footpath trodden out by moccasins. Naboth expects to
+ make town lots of it and his fortune in one and the same day; but when I
+ take the trail to talk with old Seyavi at the campoodie, it occurs to me
+ that though the field may serve a good turn in those days it will hardly
+ be happier. No, certainly not happier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE MESA TRAIL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The mesa trail begins in the campoodie at the corner of Naboth's field,
+ though one may drop into it from the wood road toward the canon, or from
+ any of the cattle paths that go up along the streamside; a clean, pale,
+ smooth-trodden way between spiny shrubs, comfortably wide for a horse or
+ an Indian. It begins, I say, at the campoodie, and goes on toward the
+ twilight hills and the borders of Shoshone Land. It strikes diagonally
+ across the foot of the hill-slope from the field until it reaches the
+ larkspur level, and holds south along the front of Oppapago, having the
+ high ranges to the right and the foothills and the great Bitter Lake below
+ it on the left. The mesa holds very level here, cut across at intervals by
+ the deep washes of dwindling streams, and its treeless spaces uncramp the
+ soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mesa trails were meant to be traveled on horseback, at the jigging coyote
+ trot that only western-bred horses learn successfully. A foot-pace carries
+ one too slowly past the units in a decorative scheme that is on a scale
+ with the country round for bigness. It takes days' journeys to give a note
+ of variety to the country of the social shrubs. These chiefly clothe the
+ benches and eastern foot-slopes of the Sierras,&mdash;great spreads of
+ artemisia, coleogyne, and spinosa, suffering no other woody stemmed thing
+ in their purlieus; this by election apparently, with no elbowing; and the
+ several shrubs have each their clientele of flowering herbs. It would be
+ worth knowing how much the devastating sheep have had to do with driving
+ the tender plants to the shelter of the prickle-bushes. It might have
+ begun earlier, in the time Seyavi of the campoodie tells of, when antelope
+ ran on the mesa like sheep for numbers, but scarcely any foot-high herb
+ rears itself except from the midst of some stout twigged shrub; larkspur
+ in the coleogyne, and for every spinosa the purpling coils of phacelia. In
+ the shrub shelter, in the season, flock the little stemless things whose
+ blossom time is as short as a marriage song. The larkspurs make the best
+ showing, being tall and sweet, swaying a little above the shrubbery,
+ scattering pollen dust which Navajo brides gather to fill their marriage
+ baskets. This were an easier task than to find two of them of a shade.
+ Larkspurs in the botany are blue, but if you were to slip rein to the stub
+ of some black sage and set about proving it you would be still at it by
+ the hour when the white gilias set their pale disks to the westering sun.
+ This is the gilia the children call "evening snow," and it is no use
+ trying to improve on children's names for wild flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the height of a horse you look down to clean spaces in a shifty
+ yellow soil, bare to the eye as a newly sanded floor. Then as soon as ever
+ the hill shadows begin to swell out from the sidelong ranges, come little
+ flakes of whiteness fluttering at the edge of the sand. By dusk there are
+ tiny drifts in the lee of every strong shrub, rosy-tipped corollas as
+ riotous in the sliding mesa wind as if they were real flakes shaken out of
+ a cloud, not sprung from the ground on wiry three-inch stems. They keep
+ awake all night, and all the air is heavy and musky sweet because of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farther south on the trail there will be poppies meeting ankle deep, and
+ singly, peacock-painted bubbles of calochortus blown out at the tops of
+ tall stems. But before the season is in tune for the gayer blossoms the
+ best display of color is in the lupin wash. There is always a lupin wash
+ somewhere on the mesa trail,&mdash;a broad, shallow, cobble-paved sink of
+ vanished waters, where the hummocks of Lupinus ornatus run a delicate
+ gamut from silvery green of spring to silvery white of winter foliage.
+ They look in fullest leaf, except for color, most like the huddled huts of
+ the campoodie, and the largest of them might be a man's length in
+ diameter. In their season, which is after the gilias are at their best,
+ and before the larkspurs are ripe for pollen gathering, every terminal
+ whorl of the lupin sends up its blossom stalk, not holding any constant
+ blue, but paling and purpling to guide the friendly bee to virginal honey
+ sips, or away from the perfected and depleted flower. The length of the
+ blossom stalk conforms to the rounded contour of the plant, and of these
+ there will be a million moving indescribably in the airy current that
+ flows down the swale of the wash.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is always a little wind on the mesa, a sliding current of cooler air
+ going down the face of the mountain of its own momentum, but not to
+ disturb the silence of great space. Passing the wide mouths of canons, one
+ gets the effect of whatever is doing in them, openly or behind a screen of
+ cloud,&mdash;thunder of falls, wind in the pine leaves, or rush and roar
+ of rain. The rumor of tumult grows and dies in passing, as from open doors
+ gaping on a village street, but does not impinge on the effect of
+ solitariness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In quiet weather mesa days have no parallel for stillness, but the night
+ silence breaks into certain mellow or poignant notes. Late afternoons the
+ burrowing owls may be seen blinking at the doors of their hummocks with
+ perhaps four or five elfish nestlings arow, and by twilight begin a soft
+ whoo-oo-ing, rounder, sweeter, more incessant in mating time. It is not
+ possible to disassociate the call of the burrowing owl from the late slant
+ light of the mesa. If the fine vibrations which are the golden-violet glow
+ of spring twilights were to tremble into sound, it would be just that
+ mellow double note breaking along the blossom-tops. While the glow holds
+ one sees the thistle-down flights and pouncings after prey, and on into
+ the dark hears their soft pus-ssh! clearing out of the trail ahead. Maybe
+ the pinpoint shriek of field mouse or kangaroo rat that pricks the wakeful
+ pauses of the night is extorted by these mellow-voiced plunderers, though
+ it is just as like to be the work of the red fox on his twenty-mile
+ constitutional.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both the red fox and the coyote are free of the night hours, and both
+ killers for the pure love of slaughter. The fox is no great talker, but
+ the coyote goes garrulously through the dark in twenty keys at once,
+ gossip, warning, and abuse. They are light treaders, the split-feet, so
+ that the solitary camper sees their eyes about him in the dark sometimes,
+ and hears the soft intake of breath when no leaf has stirred and no twig
+ snapped underfoot. The coyote is your real lord of the mesa, and so he
+ makes sure you are armed with no long black instrument to spit your teeth
+ into his vitals at a thousand yards, is both bold and curious. Not so
+ bold, however, as the badger and not so much of a curmudgeon. This
+ short-legged meat-eater loves half lights and lowering days, has no
+ friends, no enemies, and disowns his offspring. Very likely if he knew how
+ hawk and crow dog him for dinners, he would resent it. But the badger is
+ not very well contrived for looking up or far to either side. Dull
+ afternoons he may be met nosing a trail hot-foot to the home of ground rat
+ or squirrel, and is with difficulty persuaded to give the right of way.
+ The badger is a pot-hunter and no sportsman. Once at the hill, he dives
+ for the central chamber, his sharp-clawed, splayey feet splashing up the
+ sand like a bather in the surf. He is a swift trailer, but not so swift or
+ secretive but some small sailing hawk or lazy crow, perhaps one or two of
+ each, has spied upon him and come drifting down the wind to the killing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No burrower is so unwise as not to have several exits from his dwelling
+ under protecting shrubs. When the badger goes down, as many of the furry
+ people as are not caught napping come up by the back doors, and the hawks
+ make short work of them. I suspect that the crows get nothing but the
+ gratification of curiosity and the pickings of some secret store of seeds
+ unearthed by the badger. Once the excavation begins they walk about
+ expectantly, but the little gray hawks beat slow circles about the doors
+ of exit, and are wiser in their generation, though they do not look it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are always solitary hawks sailing above the mesa, and where some
+ blue tower of silence lifts out of the neighboring range, an eagle hanging
+ dizzily, and always buzzards high up in the thin, translucent air making a
+ merry-go-round. Between the coyote and the birds of carrion the mesa is
+ kept clear of miserable dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wind, too, is a besom over the treeless spaces, whisking new sand over
+ the litter of the scant-leaved shrubs, and the little doorways of the
+ burrowers are as trim as city fronts. It takes man to leave unsightly
+ scars on the face of the earth. Here on the mesa the abandoned campoodies
+ of the Paiutes are spots of desolation long after the wattles of the huts
+ have warped in the brush heaps. The campoodies are near the watercourses,
+ but never in the swale of the stream. The Paiute seeks rising ground,
+ depending on air and sun for purification of his dwelling, and when it
+ becomes wholly untenable, moves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A campoodie at noontime, when there is no smoke rising and no stir of
+ life, resembles nothing so much as a collection of prodigious wasps'
+ nests. The huts are squat and brown and chimneyless, facing east, and the
+ inhabitants have the faculty of quail for making themselves scarce in the
+ underbrush at the approach of strangers. But they are really not often at
+ home during midday, only the blind and incompetent left to keep the camp.
+ These are working hours, and all across the mesa one sees the women
+ whisking seeds of chia into their spoon-shaped baskets, these emptied
+ again into the huge conical carriers, supported on the shoulders by a
+ leather band about the forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mornings and late afternoons one meets the men singly and afoot on
+ unguessable errands, or riding shaggy, browbeaten ponies, with game slung
+ across the saddle-bows. This might be deer or even antelope, rabbits, or,
+ very far south towards Shoshone Land, lizards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are myriads of lizards on the mesa, little gray darts, or larger
+ salmon-sided ones that may be found swallowing their skins in the safety
+ of a prickle-bush in early spring. Now and then a palm's breadth of the
+ trail gathers itself together and scurries off with a little rustle under
+ the brush, to resolve itself into sand again. This is pure witchcraft. If
+ you succeed in catching it in transit, it loses its power and becomes a
+ flat, horned, toad-like creature, horrid-looking and harmless, of the
+ color of the soil; and the curio dealer will give you two bits for it, to
+ stuff. Men have their season on the mesa as much as plants and four-footed
+ things, and one is not like to meet them out of their time. For example,
+ at the time of rodeos, which is perhaps April, one meets free riding vaqueros
+ who need no trails and can find cattle where to the layman no cattle
+ exist. As early as February bands of sheep work up from the south to the
+ high Sierra pastures. It appears that shepherds have not changed more than
+ sheep in the process of time. The shy hairy men who herd the tractile
+ flocks might be, except for some added clothing, the very brethren of
+ David. Of necessity they are hardy, simple livers, superstitious, fearful,
+ given to seeing visions, and almost without speech. It needs the bustle of
+ shearings and copious libations of sour, weak wine to restore the human
+ faculty. Petite Pete, who works a circuit up from the Ceriso to Red Butte
+ and around by way of Salt Flats, passes year by year on the mesa trail,
+ his thick hairy chest thrown open to all weathers, twirling his long
+ staff, and dealing brotherly with his dogs, who are possibly as
+ intelligent, certainly handsomer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A flock's journey is seven miles, ten if pasture fails, in a windless blur
+ of dust, feeding as it goes, and resting at noons. Such hours Pete weaves
+ a little screen of twigs between his head and the sun&mdash;the rest of
+ him is as impervious as one of his own sheep&mdash;and sleeps while his
+ dogs have the flocks upon their consciences. At night, wherever he may be,
+ there Pete camps, and fortunate the trail-weary traveler who falls in with
+ him. When the fire kindles and savory meat seethes in the pot, when there
+ is a drowsy blether from the flock, and far down the mesa the twilight
+ twinkle of shepherd fires, when there is a hint of blossom underfoot and a
+ heavenly whiteness on the hills, one harks back without effort to Judaea
+ and the Nativity. But one feels by day anything but good will to note the
+ shorn shrubs and cropped blossom-tops. So many seasons' effort, so many
+ suns and rains to make a pound of wool! And then there is the loss of
+ ground-inhabiting birds that must fail from the mesa when few herbs ripen
+ seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out West, the west of the mesas and the unpatented hills, there is more
+ sky than any place in the world. It does not sit flatly on the rim of
+ earth, but begins somewhere out in the space in which the earth is poised,
+ hollows more, and is full of clean winey winds. There are some odors, too,
+ that get into the blood. There is the spring smell of sage that is the
+ warning that sap is beginning to work in a soil that looks to have none of
+ the juices of life in it; it is the sort of smell that sets one thinking
+ what a long furrow the plough would turn up here, the sort of smell that
+ is the beginning of new leafage, is best at the plant's best, and leaves a
+ pungent trail where wild cattle crop. There is the smell of sage at
+ sundown, burning sage from campoodies and sheep camps, that travels on the
+ thin blue wraiths of smoke; the kind of smell that gets into the hair and
+ garments, is not much liked except upon long acquaintance, and every
+ Paiute and shepherd smells of it indubitably. There is the palpable smell
+ of the bitter dust that comes up from the alkali flats at the end of the
+ dry seasons, and the smell of rain from the wide-mouthed canons. And last
+ the smell of the salt grass country, which is the beginning of other
+ things that are the end of the mesa trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE BASKET MAKER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "A man," says Seyavi of the campoodie, "must have a woman, but a woman who
+ has a child will do very well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was perhaps why, when she lost her mate in the dying struggle of his
+ race, she never took another, but set her wit to fend for herself and her
+ young son. No doubt she was often put to it in the beginning to find food
+ for them both. The Paiutes had made their last stand at the border of the
+ Bitter Lake; battle-driven they died in its waters, and the land filled
+ with cattle-men and adventurers for gold: this while Seyavi and the boy
+ lay up in the caverns of the Black Rock and ate tule roots and fresh-water
+ clams that they dug out of the slough bottoms with their toes. In the
+ interim, while the tribes swallowed their defeat, and before the rumor of
+ war died out, they must have come very near to the bare core of things.
+ That was the time Seyavi learned the sufficiency of mother wit, and how
+ much more easily one can do without a man than might at first be supposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To understand the fashion of any life, one must know the land it is lived
+ in and the procession of the year. This valley is a narrow one, a mere
+ trough between hills, a draught for storms, hardly a crow's flight from
+ the sharp Sierras of the Snows to the curled, red and ochre, uncomforted,
+ bare ribs of Waban. Midway of the groove runs a burrowing, dull river,
+ nearly a hundred miles from where it cuts the lava flats of the north to
+ its widening in a thick, tideless pool of a lake. Hereabouts the ranges
+ have no foothills, but rise up steeply from the bench lands above the
+ river. Down from the Sierras, for the east ranges have almost no rain,
+ pour glancing white floods toward the lowest land, and all beside them lie
+ the campoodies, brown wattled brush heaps, looking east.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the river are mussels, and reeds that have edible white roots, and in
+ the soddy meadows tubers of joint grass; all these at their best in the
+ spring. On the slope the summer growth affords seeds; up the steep the
+ one-leafed pines, an oily nut. That was really all they could depend upon,
+ and that only at the mercy of the little gods of frost and rain. For the
+ rest it was cunning against cunning, caution against skill, against
+ quacking hordes of wild-fowl in the tulares, against pronghorn and bighorn
+ and deer. You can guess, however, that all this warring of rifles and
+ bowstrings, this influx of overlording whites, had made game wilder and
+ hunters fearful of being hunted. You can surmise also, for it was a crude
+ time and the land was raw, that the women became in turn the game of the
+ conquerors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There used to be in the Little Antelope a she dog, stray or outcast, that
+ had a litter in some forsaken lair, and ranged and foraged for them,
+ slinking savage and afraid, remembering and mistrusting humankind,
+ wistful, lean, and sufficient for her young.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have thought Seyavi might have had days like that, and have had perfect
+ leave to think, since she will not talk of it. Paiutes have the art of
+ reducing life to its lowest ebb and yet saving it alive on grasshoppers,
+ lizards, and strange herbs; and that time must have left no shift untried.
+ It lasted long enough for Seyavi to have evolved the philosophy of life
+ which I have set down at the beginning. She had gone beyond learning to do
+ for her son, and learned to believe it worth while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In our kind of society, when a woman ceases to alter the fashion of her
+ hair, you guess that she has passed the crisis of her experience. If she
+ goes on crimping and uncrimping with the changing mode, it is safe to
+ suppose she has never come up against anything too big for her. The Indian
+ woman gets nearly the same personal note in the pattern of her baskets.
+ Not that she does not make all kinds, carriers, water-bottles, and
+ cradles,&mdash;these are kitchen ware,&mdash;but her works of art are all
+ of the same piece. Seyavi made flaring, flat-bottomed bowls, cooking pots
+ really, when cooking was done by dropping hot stones into water-tight food
+ baskets, and for decoration a design in colored bark of the procession of
+ plumed crests of the valley quail. In this pattern she had made cooking
+ pots in the golden spring of her wedding year, when the quail went up two
+ and two to their resting places about the foot of Oppapago. In this
+ fashion she made them when, after pillage, it was possible to reinstate
+ the housewifely crafts. Quail ran then in the Black Rock by hundreds,&mdash;so
+ you will still find them in fortunate years,&mdash;and in the famine time
+ the women cut their long hair to make snares when the flocks came morning
+ and evening to the springs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seyavi made baskets for love and sold them for money, in a generation that
+ preferred iron pots for utility. Every Indian woman is an artist,&mdash;sees,
+ feels, creates, but does not philosophize about her processes. Seyavi's
+ bowls are wonders of technical precision, inside and out, the palm finds
+ no fault with them, but the subtlest appeal is in the sense that warns us
+ of humanness in the way the design spreads into the flare of the bowl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There used to be an Indian woman at Olancha who made bottle-neck trinket
+ baskets in the rattlesnake pattern, and could accommodate the design to
+ the swelling bowl and flat shoulder of the basket without sensible
+ disproportion, and so cleverly that you might own one a year without
+ thinking how it was done; but Seyavi's baskets had a touch beyond
+ cleverness. The weaver and the warp lived next to the earth and were
+ saturated with the same elements. Twice a year, in the time of white
+ butterflies and again when young quail ran neck and neck in the chaparral,
+ Seyavi cut willows for basketry by the creek where it wound toward the
+ river against the sun and sucking winds. It never quite reached the river
+ except in far-between times of summer flood, but it always tried, and the
+ willows encouraged it as much as they could. You nearly always found them
+ a little farther down than the trickle of eager water. The Paiute fashion
+ of counting time appeals to me more than any other calendar. They have no
+ stamp of heathen gods nor great ones, nor any succession of moons as have
+ red men of the East and North, but count forward and back by the progress
+ of the season; the time of taboose, before the trout begin to leap, the
+ end of the pinon harvest, about the beginning of deep snows. So they get
+ nearer the sense of the season, which runs early or late according as the
+ rains are forward or delayed. But whenever Seyavi cut willows for baskets
+ was always a golden time, and the soul of the weather went into the wood.
+ If you had ever owned one of Seyavi's golden russet cooking bowls with the
+ pattern of plumed quail, you would understand all this without saying
+ anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Seyavi made baskets for the satisfaction of desire,&mdash;for that
+ is a house-bred theory of art that makes anything more of it,&mdash;she
+ danced and dressed her hair. In those days, when the spring was at flood
+ and the blood pricked to the mating fever, the maids chose their flowers,
+ wreathed themselves, and danced in the twilights, young desire crying out
+ to young desire. They sang what the heart prompted, what the flower
+ expressed, what boded in the mating weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what flower did you wear, Seyavi?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I, ah,&mdash;the white flower of twining (clematis), on my body and my
+ hair, and so I sang:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I am the white flower of twining,
+ Little white flower by the river,
+ Oh, flower that twines close by the river;
+ Oh, trembling flower!
+ So trembles the maiden heart."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ So sang Seyavi of the campoodie before she made baskets, and in her later
+ days laid her arms upon her knees and laughed in them at the recollection.
+ But it was not often she would say so much, never understanding the keen
+ hunger I had for bits of lore and the "fool talk" of her people. She had
+ fed her young son with meadowlarks' tongues, to make him quick of speech;
+ but in late years was loath to admit it, though she had come through the
+ period of unfaith in the lore of the clan with a fine appreciation of its
+ beauty and significance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What good will your dead get, Seyavi, of the baskets you burn?" said I,
+ coveting them for my own collection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Seyavi, "As much good as yours of the flowers you strew."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oppapago looks on Waban, and Waban on Coso and the Bitter Lake, and the
+ campoodie looks on these three; and more, it sees the beginning of winds
+ along the foot of Coso, the gathering of clouds behind the high ridges,
+ the spring flush, the soft spread of wild almond bloom on the mesa. These
+ first, you understand, are the Paiute's walls, the other his furnishings.
+ Not the wattled hut is his home, but the land, the winds, the hill front,
+ the stream. These he cannot duplicate at any furbisher's shop as you who
+ live within doors, who, if your purse allows, may have the same home at
+ Sitka and Samarcand. So you see how it is that the homesickness of an
+ Indian is often unto death, since he gets no relief from it; neither wind
+ nor weed nor sky-line, nor any aspect of the hills of a strange land
+ sufficiently like his own. So it was when the government reached out for
+ the Paiutes, they gathered into the Northern Reservation only such poor
+ tribes as could devise no other end of their affairs. Here, all along the
+ river, and south to Shoshone Land, live the clans who owned the earth,
+ fallen into the deplorable condition of hangers-on. Yet you hear them
+ laughing at the hour when they draw in to the campoodie after labor, when
+ there is a smell of meat and the steam of the cooking pots goes up against
+ the sun. Then the children lie with their toes in the ashes to hear tales;
+ then they are merry, and have the joys of repletion and the nearness of
+ their kind. They have their hills, and though jostled are sufficiently
+ free to get some fortitude for what will come. For now you shall hear of
+ the end of the basket maker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In her best days Seyavi was most like Deborah, deep bosomed, broad in the
+ hips, quick in counsel, slow of speech, esteemed of her people. This was
+ that Seyavi who reared a man by her own hand, her own wit, and none other.
+ When the townspeople began to take note of her&mdash;and it was some years
+ after the war before there began to be any towns&mdash;she was then in the
+ quick maturity of primitive women; but when I knew her she seemed already
+ old. Indian women do not often live to great age, though they look
+ incredibly steeped in years. They have the wit to win sustenance from the
+ raw material of life without intervention, but they have not the sleek
+ look of the women whom the social organization conspires to nourish.
+ Seyavi had somehow squeezed out of her daily round a spiritual ichor that
+ kept the skill in her knotted fingers along after the accustomed time, but
+ that also failed. By all counts she would have been about sixty years old
+ when it came her turn to sit in the dust on the sunny side of the wickiup,
+ with little strength left for anything but looking. And in time she paid
+ the toll of the smoky huts and became blind. This is a thing so long
+ expected by the Paiutes that when it comes they find it neither bitter nor
+ sweet, but tolerable because common. There were three other blind women in
+ the campoodie, withered fruit on a bough, but they had memory and speech.
+ By noon of the sun there were never any left in the campoodie but these or
+ some mother of weanlings, and they sat to keep the ashes warm upon the
+ hearth. If it were cold, they burrowed in the blankets of the hut; if it
+ were warm, they followed the shadow of the wickiup around. Stir much out
+ of their places they hardly dared, since one might not help another; but
+ they called, in high, old cracked voices, gossip and reminder across the
+ ash heaps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, if they have your speech or you theirs, and have an hour to spare,
+ there are things to be learned of life not set down in any books, folk
+ tales, famine tales, love and long-suffering and desire, but no
+ whimpering. Now and then one or another of the blind keepers of the camp
+ will come across to where you sit gossiping, tapping her way among the
+ kitchen middens, guided by your voice that carries far in the clearness
+ and stillness of mesa afternoons. But suppose you find Seyavi retired into
+ the privacy of her blanket, you will get nothing for that day. There is no
+ other privacy possible in a campoodie. All the processes of life are
+ carried on out of doors or behind the thin, twig-woven walls of the
+ wickiup, and laughter is the only corrective for behavior. Very early the
+ Indian learns to possess his countenance in impassivity, to cover his head
+ with his blanket. Something to wrap around him is as necessary to the
+ Paiute as to you your closet to pray in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So in her blanket Seyavi, sometime basket maker, sits by the unlit hearths
+ of her tribe and digests her life, nourishing her spirit against the time
+ of the spirit's need, for she knows in fact quite as much of these matters
+ as you who have a larger hope, though she has none but the certainty that
+ having borne herself courageously to this end she will not be reborn a
+ coyote.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE STREETS OF THE MOUNTAINS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All streets of the mountains lead to the citadel; steep or slow they go up
+ to the core of the hills. Any trail that goes otherwhere must dip and
+ cross, sidle and take chances. Rifts of the hills open into each other,
+ and the high meadows are often wide enough to be called valleys by
+ courtesy; but one keeps this distinction in mind,&mdash;valleys are the
+ sunken places of the earth, canons are scored out by the glacier ploughs
+ of God. They have a better name in the Rockies for these hill-fenced open
+ glades of pleasantness; they call them parks. Here and there in the hill
+ country one comes upon blind gullies fronted by high stony barriers. These
+ head also for the heart of the mountains; their distinction is that they
+ never get anywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All mountain streets have streams to thread them, or deep grooves where a
+ stream might run. You would do well to avoid that range uncomforted by
+ singing floods. You will find it forsaken of most things but beauty and
+ madness and death and God. Many such lie east and north away from the mid
+ Sierras, and quicken the imagination with the sense of purposes not
+ revealed, but the ordinary traveler brings nothing away from them but an
+ intolerable thirst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The river canons of the Sierras of the Snows are better worth while than
+ most Broadways, though the choice of them is like the choice of streets,
+ not very well determined by their names. There is always an amount of
+ local history to be read in the names of mountain highways where one
+ touches the successive waves of occupation or discovery, as in the old
+ villages where the neighborhoods are not built but grow. Here you have the
+ Spanish Californian in Cero Gordo and pinon; Symmes and Shepherd, pioneers
+ both; Tunawai, probably Shoshone; Oak Creek, Kearsarge,&mdash;easy to fix
+ the date of that christening,&mdash;Tinpah, Paiute that; Mist Canon and
+ Paddy Jack's. The streets of the west Sierras sloping toward the San
+ Joaquin are long and winding, but from the east, my country, a day's ride
+ carries one to the lake regions. The next day reaches the passes of the
+ high divide, but whether one gets passage depends a little on how many
+ have gone that road before, and much on one's own powers. The passes are
+ steep and windy ridges, though not the highest. By two and three thousand
+ feet the snow-caps overtop them. It is even possible to wind through the
+ Sierras without having passed above timber-line, but one misses a great
+ exhilaration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shape of a new mountain is roughly pyramidal, running out into long
+ shark-finned ridges that interfere and merge into other thunder-splintered
+ sierras. You get the saw-tooth effect from a distance, but the near-by
+ granite bulk glitters with the terrible keen polish of old glacial ages. I
+ say terrible; so it seems. When those glossy domes swim into the
+ alpenglow, wet after rain, you conceive how long and imperturbable are the
+ purposes of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never believe what you are told, that midsummer is the best time to go up
+ the streets of the mountain&mdash;well&mdash;perhaps for the merely idle
+ or sportsmanly or scientific; but for seeing and understanding, the best
+ time is when you have the longest leave to stay. And here is a hint if you
+ would attempt the stateliest approaches; travel light, and as much as
+ possible live off the land. Mulligatawny soup and tinned lobster will not
+ bring you the favor of the woodlanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every canon commends itself for some particular pleasantness; this for
+ pines, another for trout, one for pure bleak beauty of granite buttresses,
+ one for its far-flung irised falls; and as I say, though some are easier
+ going, leads each to the cloud shouldering citadel. First, near the canon
+ mouth you get the low-heading full-branched, one-leaf pines. That is the
+ sort of tree to know at sight, for the globose, resin-dripping cones have
+ palatable, nourishing kernels, the main harvest of the Paiutes. That
+ perhaps accounts for their growing accommodatingly below the limit of deep
+ snows, grouped sombrely on the valley-ward slopes. The real procession of
+ the pines begins in the rifts with the long-leafed Pinus jeffreyi, sighing
+ its soul away upon the wind. And it ought not to sigh in such good
+ company. Here begins the manzanita, adjusting its tortuous stiff stems to
+ the sharp waste of boulders, its pale olive leaves twisting edgewise to
+ the sleek, ruddy, chestnut stems; begins also the meadowsweet, burnished
+ laurel, and the million unregarded trumpets of the coral-red pentstemon.
+ Wild life is likely to be busiest about the lower pine borders. One looks
+ in hollow trees and hiving rocks for wild honey. The drone of bees, the
+ chatter of jays, the hurry and stir of squirrels, is incessant; the air is
+ odorous and hot. The roar of the stream fills up the morning and evening
+ intervals, and at night the deer feed in the buckthorn thickets. It is
+ worth watching the year round in the purlieus of the long-leafed pines.
+ One month or another you set sight or trail of most roving mountain
+ dwellers as they follow the limit of forbidding snows, and more bloom than
+ you can properly appreciate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever goes up or comes down the streets of the mountains, water has the
+ right of way; it takes the lowest ground and the shortest passage. Where
+ the rifts are narrow, and some of the Sierra canons are not a stone's
+ throw from wall to wall, the best trail for foot or horse winds
+ considerably above the watercourses; but in a country of cone-bearers
+ there is usually a good strip of swardy sod along the canon floor. Pine
+ woods, the short-leafed Balfour and Murryana of the high Sierras, are
+ sombre, rooted in the litter of a thousand years, hushed, and corrective
+ to the spirit. The trail passes insensibly into them from the black pines
+ and a thin belt of firs. You look back as you rise, and strain for
+ glimpses of the tawny valley, blue glints of the Bitter Lake, and tender
+ cloud films on the farther ranges. For such pictures the pine branches
+ make a noble frame. Presently they close in wholly; they draw mysteriously
+ near, covering your tracks, giving up the trail indifferently, or with a
+ secret grudge. You get a kind of impatience with their locked ranks, until
+ you come out lastly on some high, windy dome and see what they are about.
+ They troop thickly up the open ways, river banks, and brook borders; up
+ open swales of dribbling springs; swarm over old moraines; circle the
+ peaty swamps and part and meet about clean still lakes; scale the stony
+ gullies; tormented, bowed, persisting to the door of the storm chambers,
+ tall priests to pray for rain. The spring winds lift clouds of pollen
+ dust, finer than frankincense, and trail it out over high altars, staining
+ the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt they understand this work better than we; in fact they know no
+ other. "Come," say the churches of the valleys, after a season of dry
+ years, "let us pray for rain." They would do better to plant more trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a pity we have let the gift of lyric improvisation die out. Sitting
+ islanded on some gray peak above the encompassing wood, the soul is lifted
+ up to sing the Iliad of the pines. They have no voice but the wind, and no
+ sound of them rises up to the high places. But the waters, the evidences
+ of their power, that go down the steep and stony ways, the outlets of
+ ice-bordered pools, the young rivers swaying with the force of their
+ running, they sing and shout and trumpet at the falls, and the noise of it
+ far outreaches the forest spires. You see from these conning towers how
+ they call and find each other in the slender gorges; how they fumble in
+ the meadows, needing the sheer nearing walls to give them countenance and
+ show the way; and how the pine woods are made glad by them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing else in the streets of the mountains gives such a sense of
+ pageantry as the conifers; other trees, if they are any, are home
+ dwellers, like the tender fluttered, sisterhood of quaking asp. They grow
+ in clumps by spring borders, and all their stems have a permanent curve
+ toward the down slope, as you may also see in hillside pines, where they
+ have borne the weight of sagging drifts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well up from the valley, at the confluence of canons, are delectable
+ summer meadows. Fireweed flames about them against the gray boulders;
+ streams are open, go smoothly about the glacier slips and make deep bluish
+ pools for trout. Pines raise statelier shafts and give themselves room to
+ grow,&mdash;gentians, shinleaf, and little grass of Parnassus in their
+ golden checkered shadows; the meadow is white with violets and all
+ outdoors keeps the clock. For example, when the ripples at the ford of the
+ creek raise a clear half tone,&mdash;sign that the snow water has come
+ down from the heated high ridges,&mdash;it is time to light the evening
+ fire. When it drops off a note&mdash;but you will not know it except the
+ Douglas squirrel tells you with his high, fluty chirrup from the pines'
+ aerial gloom&mdash;sign that some star watcher has caught the first far
+ glint of the nearing sun. Whitney cries it from his vantage tower; it
+ flashes from Oppapago to the front of Williamson; LeConte speeds it to the
+ westering peaks. The high rills wake and run, the birds begin. But down
+ three thousand feet in the canon, where you stir the fire under the
+ cooking pot, it will not be day for an hour. It goes on, the play of light
+ across the high places, rosy, purpling, tender, glint and glow, thunder
+ and windy flood, like the grave, exulting talk of elders above a merry
+ game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who shall say what another will find most to his liking in the streets of
+ the mountains. As for me, once set above the country of the silver firs, I
+ must go on until I find white columbine. Around the amphitheatres of the
+ lake regions and above them to the limit of perennial drifts they gather
+ flock-wise in splintered rock wastes. The crowds of them, the airy spread
+ of sepals, the pale purity of the petal spurs, the quivering swing of
+ bloom, obsesses the sense. One must learn to spare a little of the pang of
+ inexpressible beauty, not to spend all one's purse in one shop. There is
+ always another year, and another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lingering on in the alpine regions until the first full snow, which is
+ often before the cessation of bloom, one goes down in good company. First
+ snows are soft and clogging and make laborious paths. Then it is the
+ roving inhabitants range down to the edge of the wood, below the limit of
+ early storms. Early winter and early spring one may have sight or track of
+ deer and bear and bighorn, cougar and bobcat, about the thickets of
+ buckthorn on open slopes between the black pines. But when the ice crust
+ is firm above the twenty foot drifts, they range far and forage where they
+ will. Often in midwinter will come, now and then, a long fall of soft snow
+ piling three or four feet above the ice crust, and work a real hardship
+ for the dwellers of these streets. When such a storm portends the
+ weather-wise blacktail will go down across the valley and up to the
+ pastures of Waban where no more snow falls than suffices to nourish the
+ sparsely growing pines. But the bighorn, the wild sheep, able to bear the
+ bitterest storms with no signs of stress, cannot cope with the loose
+ shifty snow. Never such a storm goes over the mountains that the Indians
+ do not catch them floundering belly deep among the lower rifts. I have a
+ pair of horns, inconceivably heavy, that were borne as late as a year ago
+ by a very monarch of the flock whom death overtook at the mouth of Oak
+ Creek after a week of wet snow. He met it as a king should, with no vain
+ effort or trembling, and it was wholly kind to take him so with four of
+ his following rather than that the night prowlers should find him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is always more life abroad in the winter hills than one looks to
+ find, and much more in evidence than in summer weather. Light feet of hare
+ that make no print on the forest litter leave a wondrously plain track in
+ the snow. We used to look and look at the beginning of winter for the
+ birds to come down from the pine lands; looked in the orchard and stubble;
+ looked north and south on the mesa for their migratory passing, and
+ wondered that they never came. Busy little grosbeaks picked about the
+ kitchen doors, and woodpeckers tapped the eaves of the farm buildings, but
+ we saw hardly any other of the frequenters of the summer canons. After a
+ while when we grew bold to tempt the snow borders we found them in the
+ street of the mountains. In the thick pine woods where the overlapping
+ boughs hung with snow-wreaths make wind-proof shelter tents, in a very
+ community of dwelling, winter the bird-folk who get their living from the
+ persisting cones and the larvae harboring bark. Ground inhabiting species
+ seek the dim snow chambers of the chaparral. Consider how it must be in a
+ hill-slope overgrown with stout-twigged, partly evergreen shrubs, more
+ than man high, and as thick as a hedge. Not all the canon's sifting of
+ snow can fill the intricate spaces of the hill tangles. Here and there an
+ overhanging rock, or a stiff arch of buckthorn, makes an opening to
+ communicating rooms and runways deep under the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The light filtering through the snow walls is blue and ghostly, but serves
+ to show seeds of shrubs and grass, and berries, and the wind-built walls
+ are warm against the wind. It seems that live plants, especially if they
+ are evergreen and growing, give off heat; the snow wall melts earliest
+ from within and hollows to thinnness before there is a hint of spring in
+ the air. But you think of these things afterward. Up in the street it has
+ the effect of being done consciously; the buckthorns lean to each other
+ and the drift to them, the little birds run in and out of their appointed
+ ways with the greatest cheerfulness. They give almost no tokens of
+ distress, and even if the winter tries them too much you are not to pity
+ them. You of the house habit can hardly understand the sense of the hills.
+ No doubt the labor of being comfortable gives you an exaggerated opinion
+ of yourself, an exaggerated pain to be set aside. Whether the wild things
+ understand it or not they adapt themselves to its processes with the
+ greater ease. The business that goes on in the street of the mountain is
+ tremendous, world-formative. Here go birds, squirrels, and red deer,
+ children crying small wares and playing in the street, but they do not
+ obstruct its affairs. Summer is their holiday; "Come now," says the lord
+ of the street, "I have need of a great work and no more playing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they are left borders and breathing-space out of pure kindness. They
+ are not pushed out except by the exigencies of the nobler plan which they
+ accept with a dignity the rest of us have not yet learned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WATER BORDERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I like that name the Indians give to the mountain of Lone Pine, and find
+ it pertinent to my subject,&mdash;Oppapago, The Weeper. It sits eastward
+ and solitary from the lordliest ranks of the Sierras, and above a range of
+ little, old, blunt hills, and has a bowed, grave aspect as of some woman
+ you might have known, looking out across the grassy barrows of her dead.
+ From twin gray lakes under its noble brow stream down incessant white and
+ tumbling waters. "Mahala all time cry," said Winnenap', drawing furrows in
+ his rugged, wrinkled cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The origin of mountain streams is like the origin of tears, patent to the
+ understanding but mysterious to the sense. They are always at it, but one
+ so seldom catches them in the act. Here in the valley there is no
+ cessation of waters even in the season when the niggard frost gives them
+ scant leave to run. They make the most of their midday hour, and tinkle
+ all night thinly under the ice. An ear laid to the snow catches a muffled
+ hint of their eternal busyness fifteen or twenty feet under the canon
+ drifts, and long before any appreciable spring thaw, the sagging edges of
+ the snow bridges mark out the place of their running. One who ventures to
+ look for it finds the immediate source of the spring freshets&mdash;all
+ the hill fronts furrowed with the reek of melting drifts, all the gravelly
+ flats in a swirl of waters. But later, in June or July, when the camping
+ season begins, there runs the stream away full and singing, with no
+ visible reinforcement other than an icy trickle from some high, belated
+ dot of snow. Oftenest the stream drops bodily from the bleak bowl of some
+ alpine lake; sometimes breaks out of a hillside as a spring where the ear
+ can trace it under the rubble of loose stones to the neighborhood of some
+ blind pool. But that leaves the lakes to be accounted for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lake is the eye of the mountain, jade green, placid, unwinking, also
+ unfathomable. Whatever goes on under the high and stony brows is guessed
+ at. It is always a favorite local tradition that one or another of the
+ blind lakes is bottomless. Often they lie in such deep cairns of broken
+ boulders that one never gets quite to them, or gets away unhurt. One such
+ drops below the plunging slope that the Kearsarge trail winds over,
+ perilously, nearing the pass. It lies still and wickedly green in its
+ sharp-lipped cap, and the guides of that region love to tell of the packs
+ and pack animals it has swallowed up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the lakes of Oppapago are perhaps not so deep, less green than gray,
+ and better befriended. The ousel haunts them, while still hang about their
+ coasts the thin undercut drifts that never quite leave the high altitudes.
+ In and out of the bluish ice caves he flits and sings, and his singing
+ heard from above is sweet and uncanny like the Nixie's chord. One finds
+ butterflies, too, about these high, sharp regions which might be called
+ desolate, but will not by me who love them. This is above timber-line but
+ not too high for comforting by succulent small herbs and golden tufted
+ grass. A granite mountain does not crumble with alacrity, but once
+ resolved to soil makes the best of it. Every handful of loose gravel not
+ wholly water leached affords a plant footing, and even in such unpromising
+ surroundings there is a choice of locations. There is never going to be
+ any communism of mountain herbage, their affinities are too sure. Full in
+ the tunnels of snow water on gravelly, open spaces in the shadow of a
+ drift, one looks to find buttercups, frozen knee-deep by night, and owning
+ no desire but to ripen their fruit above the icy bath. Soppy little plants
+ of the portulaca and small, fine ferns shiver under the drip of falls and
+ in dribbling crevices. The bleaker the situation, so it is near a stream
+ border, the better the cassiope loves it. Yet I have not found it on the
+ polished glacier slips, but where the country rock cleaves and splinters
+ in the high windy headlands that the wild sheep frequents, hordes and
+ hordes of the white bells swing over matted, mossy foliage. On Oppapago,
+ which is also called Sheep Mountain, one finds not far from the beds of
+ cassiope the ice-worn, stony hollows where the big-horns cradle their
+ young.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are above the wolf's quest and the eagle's wont, and though the
+ heather beds are softer, they are neither so dry nor so warm, and here
+ only the stars go by. No other animal of any pretensions makes a habitat
+ of the alpine regions. Now and then one gets a hint of some small, brown
+ creature, rat or mouse kind, that slips secretly among the rocks; no
+ others adapt themselves to desertness of aridity or altitude so readily as
+ these ground inhabiting, graminivorous species. If there is an open stream
+ the trout go up the lake as far as the water breeds food for them, but the
+ ousel goes farthest, for pure love of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since no lake can be at the highest point, it is possible to find plant
+ life higher than the water borders; grasses perhaps the highest, gilias,
+ royal blue trusses of polymonium, rosy plats of Sierra primroses. What one
+ has to get used to in flowers at high altitudes is the bleaching of the
+ sun. Hardly do they hold their virgin color for a day, and this early
+ fading before their function is performed gives them a pitiful appearance
+ not according with their hardihood. The color scheme runs along the high
+ ridges from blue to rosy purple, carmine and coral red; along the water
+ borders it is chiefly white and yellow where the mimulus makes a vivid
+ note, running into red when the two schemes meet and mix about the borders
+ of the meadows, at the upper limit of the columbine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is the fashion in which a mountain stream gets down from the
+ perennial pastures of the snow to its proper level and identity as an
+ irrigating ditch. It slips stilly by the glacier scoured rim of an ice
+ bordered pool, drops over sheer, broken ledges to another pool, gathers
+ itself, plunges headlong on a rocky ripple slope, finds a lake again,
+ reinforced, roars downward to a pothole, foams and bridles, glides a
+ tranquil reach in some still meadow, tumbles into a sharp groove between
+ hill flanks, curdles under the stream tangles, and so arrives at the open
+ country and steadier going. Meadows, little strips of alpine freshness,
+ begin before the timberline is reached. Here one treads on a carpet of
+ dwarf willows, downy catkins of creditable size and the greatest economy
+ of foliage and stems. No other plant of high altitudes knows its business
+ so well. It hugs the ground, grows roots from stem joints where no roots
+ should be, grows a slender leaf or two and twice as many erect full
+ catkins that rarely, even in that short growing season, fail of fruit.
+ Dipping over banks in the inlets of the creeks, the fortunate find the
+ rosy apples of the miniature manzanita, barely, but always quite
+ sufficiently, borne above the spongy sod. It does not do to be anything
+ but humble in the alpine regions, but not fearful. I have pawed about for
+ hours in the chill sward of meadows where one might properly expect to get
+ one's death, and got no harm from it, except it might be Oliver Twist's
+ complaint. One comes soon after this to shrubby willows, and where willows
+ are trout may be confidently looked for in most Sierra streams. There is
+ no accounting for their distribution; though provident anglers have
+ assisted nature of late, one still comes upon roaring brown waters where
+ trout might very well be, but are not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The highest limit of conifers&mdash;in the middle Sierras, the white bark
+ pine&mdash;is not along the water border. They come to it about the level
+ of the heather, but they have no such affinity for dampness as the
+ tamarack pines. Scarcely any bird-note breaks the stillness of the
+ timber-line, but chipmunks inhabit here, as may be guessed by the gnawed
+ ruddy cones of the pines, and lowering hours the woodchucks come down to
+ the water. On a little spit of land running into Windy Lake we found one
+ summer the evidence of a tragedy; a pair of sheep's horns not fully grown
+ caught in the crotch of a pine where the living sheep must have lodged
+ them. The trunk of the tree had quite closed over them, and the skull
+ bones crumbled away from the weathered horn cases. We hoped it was not too
+ far out of the running of night prowlers to have put a speedy end to the
+ long agony, but we could not be sure. I never liked the spit of Windy Lake
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems that all snow nourished plants count nothing so excellent in
+ their kind as to be forehanded with their bloom, working secretly to that
+ end under the high piled winters. The heathers begin by the lake borders,
+ while little sodden drifts still shelter under their branches. I have seen
+ the tiniest of them (Kalmia glauca) blooming, and with well-formed fruit,
+ a foot away from a snowbank from which it could hardly have emerged within
+ a week. Somehow the soul of the heather has entered into the blood of the
+ English-speaking. "And oh! is that heather?" they say; and the most
+ indifferent ends by picking a sprig of it in a hushed, wondering way. One
+ must suppose that the root of their respective races issued from the
+ glacial borders at about the same epoch, and remember their origin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the pines where the slope of the land allows it, the streams run
+ into smooth, brown, trout-abounding rills across open flats that are in
+ reality filled lake basins. These are the displaying grounds of the
+ gentians&mdash;blue&mdash;blue&mdash;eye-blue, perhaps, virtuous and
+ likable flowers. One is not surprised to learn that they have tonic
+ properties. But if your meadow should be outside the forest reserve, and
+ the sheep have been there, you will find little but the shorter, paler G.
+ newberryii, and in the matted sods of the little tongues of greenness that
+ lick up among the pines along the watercourses, white, scentless, nearly
+ stemless, alpine violets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At about the nine thousand foot level and in the summer there will be
+ hosts of rosy-winged dodecatheon, called shooting-stars, outlining the
+ crystal tunnels in the sod. Single flowers have often a two-inch spread of
+ petal, and the full, twelve blossomed heads above the slender pedicels
+ have the airy effect of wings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is about this level one looks to find the largest lakes with thick
+ ranks of pines bearing down on them, often swamped in the summer floods
+ and paying the inevitable penalty for such encroachment. Here in wet coves
+ of the hills harbors that crowd of bloom that makes the wonder of the
+ Sierra canons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They drift under the alternate flicker and gloom of the windy rooms of
+ pines, in gray rock shelters, and by the ooze of blind springs, and their
+ juxtapositions are the best imaginable. Lilies come up out of fern beds,
+ columbine swings over meadowsweet, white rein-orchids quake in the leaning
+ grass. Open swales, where in wet years may be running water, are
+ plantations of false hellebore (Veratrum californicum), tall, branched
+ candelabra of greenish bloom above the sessile, sheathing, boat-shaped
+ leaves, semi-translucent in the sun. A stately plant of the lily family,
+ but why "false?" It is frankly offensive in its character, and its young
+ juices deadly as any hellebore that ever grew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like most mountain herbs, it has an uncanny haste to bloom. One hears by
+ night, when all the wood is still, the crepitatious rustle of the
+ unfolding leaves and the pushing flower-stalk within, that has open
+ blossoms before it has fairly uncramped from the sheath. It commends
+ itself by a certain exclusiveness of growth, taking enough room and never
+ elbowing; for if the flora of the lake region has a fault it is that there
+ is too much of it. We have more than three hundred species from Kearsarge
+ Canon alone, and if that does not include them all it is because they were
+ already collected otherwhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One expects to find lakes down to about nine thousand feet, leading into
+ each other by comparatively open ripple slopes and white cascades. Below
+ the lakes are filled basins that are still spongy swamps, or substantial
+ meadows, as they get down and down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here begin the stream tangles. On the east slopes of the middle Sierras
+ the pines, all but an occasional yellow variety, desert the stream borders
+ about the level of the lowest lakes, and the birches and tree-willows
+ begin. The firs hold on almost to the mesa levels,&mdash;there are no
+ foothills on this eastern slope,&mdash;and whoever has firs misses nothing
+ else. It goes without saying that a tree that can afford to take fifty
+ years to its first fruiting will repay acquaintance. It keeps, too, all
+ that half century, a virginal grace of outline, but having once flowered,
+ begins quietly to put away the things of its youth. Years by year the
+ lower rounds of boughs are shed, leaving no scar; year by year the
+ star-branched minarets approach the sky. A fir-tree loves a water border,
+ loves a long wind in a draughty canon, loves to spend itself secretly on
+ the inner finishings of its burnished, shapely cones. Broken open in
+ mid-season the petal-shaped scales show a crimson satin surface, perfect
+ as a rose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The birch&mdash;the brown-bark western birch characteristic of lower
+ stream tangles&mdash;is a spoil sport. It grows thickly to choke the
+ stream that feeds it; grudges it the sky and space for angler's rod and
+ fly. The willows do better; painted-cup, cypripedium, and the hollow
+ stalks of span-broad white umbels, find a footing among their stems. But
+ in general the steep plunges, the white swirls, green and tawny pools, the
+ gliding hush of waters between the meadows and the mesas afford little
+ fishing and few flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One looks for these to begin again when once free of the rifted canon
+ walls; the high note of babble and laughter falls off to the steadier
+ mellow tone of a stream that knows its purpose and reflects the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ OTHER WATER BORDERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is the proper destiny of every considerable stream in the west to
+ become an irrigating ditch. It would seem the streams are willing. They go
+ as far as they can, or dare, toward the tillable lands in their own
+ boulder fenced gullies&mdash;but how much farther in the man-made
+ waterways. It is difficult to come into intimate relations with
+ appropriated waters; like very busy people they have no time to reveal
+ themselves. One needs to have known an irrigating ditch when it was a
+ brook, and to have lived by it, to mark the morning and evening tone of
+ its crooning, rising and falling to the excess of snow water; to have
+ watched far across the valley, south to the Eclipse and north to the
+ Twisted Dyke, the shining wall of the village water gate; to see still
+ blue herons stalking the little glinting weirs across the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps to get into the mood of the waterways one needs to have seen old
+ Amos Judson asquat on the headgate with his gun, guarding his water-right
+ toward the end of a dry summer. Amos owned the half of Tule Creek and the
+ other half pertained to the neighboring Greenfields ranch. Years of a
+ "short water crop," that is, when too little snow fell on the high pine
+ ridges, or, falling, melted too early, Amos held that it took all the
+ water that came down to make his half, and maintained it with a Winchester
+ and a deadly aim. Jesus Montana, first proprietor of Greenfields,&mdash;you
+ can see at once that Judson had the racial advantage,&mdash;contesting the
+ right with him, walked into five of Judson's bullets and his eternal
+ possessions on the same occasion. That was the Homeric age of settlement
+ and passed into tradition. Twelve years later one of the Clarks, holding
+ Greenfields, not so very green by now, shot one of the Judsons. Perhaps he
+ hoped that also might become classic, but the jury found for manslaughter.
+ It had the effect of discouraging the Greenfields claim, but Amos used to
+ sit on the headgate just the same, as quaint and lone a figure as the
+ sandhill crane watching for water toads below the Tule drop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every subsequent owner of Greenfields bought it with Amos in full view.
+ The last of these was Diedrick. Along in August of that year came a week
+ of low water. Judson's ditch failed and he went out with his rifle to
+ learn why. There on the headgate sat Diedrick's frau with a long-handled
+ shovel across her lap and all the water turned into Diedrick's ditch;
+ there she sat knitting through the long sun, and the children brought out
+ her dinner. It was all up with Amos; he was too much of a gentleman to
+ fight a lady&mdash;that was the way he expressed it. She was a very large
+ lady, and a long-handled shovel is no mean weapon. The next year Judson
+ and Diedrick put in a modern water gauge and took the summer ebb in equal
+ inches. Some of the water-right difficulties are more squalid than this,
+ some more tragic; but unless you have known them you cannot very well know
+ what the water thinks as it slips past the gardens and in the long slow
+ sweeps of the canal. You get that sense of brooding from the confined and
+ sober floods, not all at once but by degrees, as one might become aware of
+ a middle-aged and serious neighbor who has had that in his life to make
+ him so. It is the repose of the completely accepted instinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the water runs a certain following of thirsty herbs and shrubs. The
+ willows go as far as the stream goes, and a bit farther on the slightest
+ provocation. They will strike root in the leak of a flume, or the dribble
+ of an overfull bank, coaxing the water beyond its appointed bounds. Given
+ a new waterway in a barren land, and in three years the willows have
+ fringed all its miles of banks; three years more and they will touch tops
+ across it. It is perhaps due to the early usurpation of the willows that
+ so little else finds growing-room along the large canals. The birch
+ beginning far back in the canon tangles is more conservative; it is shy of
+ man haunts and needs to have the permanence of its drink assured. It stops
+ far short of the summer limit of waters, and I have never known it to take
+ up a position on the banks beyond the ploughed lands. There is something
+ almost like premeditation in the avoidance of cultivated tracts by certain
+ plants of water borders. The clematis, mingling its foliage secretly with
+ its host, comes down with the stream tangles to the village fences, skips
+ over to corners of little used pasture lands and the plantations that
+ spring up about waste water pools; but never ventures a footing in the
+ trail of spade or plough; will not be persuaded to grow in any garden
+ plot. On the other hand, the horehound, the common European species
+ imported with the colonies, hankers after hedgerows and snug little
+ borders. It is more widely distributed than many native species, and may
+ be always found along the ditches in the village corners, where it is not
+ appreciated. The irrigating ditch is an impartial distributer. It gathers
+ all the alien weeds that come west in garden and grass seeds and affords
+ them harbor in its banks. There one finds the European mallow (Malva
+ rotundifolia) spreading out to the streets with the summer overflow, and
+ every spring a dandelion or two, brought in with the blue grass seed,
+ uncurls in the swardy soil. Farther than either of these have come the
+ lilies that the Chinese coolies cultivate in adjacent mud holes for their
+ foodful bulbs. The seegoo establishes itself very readily in swampy
+ borders, and the white blossom spikes among the arrow-pointed leaves are
+ quite as acceptable to the eye as any native species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the neighborhood of towns founded by the Spanish Californians, whether
+ this plant is native to the locality or not, one can always find aromatic
+ clumps of yerba buena, the "good herb" (Micromeria douglassii). The virtue
+ of it as a febrifuge was taught to the mission fathers by the neophytes,
+ and wise old dames of my acquaintance have worked astonishing cures with
+ it and the succulent yerba mansa. This last is native to wet meadows and
+ distinguished enough to have a family all to itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where the irrigating ditches are shallow and a little neglected, they
+ choke quickly with watercress that multiplies about the lowest Sierra
+ springs. It is characteristic of the frequenters of water borders near man
+ haunts, that they are chiefly of the sorts that are useful to man, as if
+ they made their services an excuse for the intrusion. The joint-grass of
+ soggy pastures produces edible, nut-flavored tubers, called by the Indians
+ taboose. The common reed of the ultramontane marshes (here Phragmites
+ vulgaris), a very stately, whispering reed, light and strong for shafts or
+ arrows, affords sweet sap and pith which makes a passable sugar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems the secrets of plant powers and influences yield themselves most
+ readily to primitive peoples, at least one never hears of the knowledge
+ coming from any other source. The Indian never concerns himself, as the
+ botanist and the poet, with the plant's appearances and relations, but
+ with what it can do for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It can do much, but how do you suppose he finds it out; what instincts or
+ accidents guide him? How does a cat know when to eat catnip? Why do
+ western bred cattle avoid loco weed, and strangers eat it and go mad? One
+ might suppose that in a time of famine the Paiutes digged wild parsnip in
+ meadow corners and died from eating it, and so learned to produce death
+ swiftly and at will. But how did they learn, repenting in the last agony,
+ that animal fat is the best antidote for its virulence; and who taught
+ them that the essence of joint pine (Ephedra nevadensis), which looks to
+ have no juice in it of any sort, is efficacious in stomachic disorders.
+ But they so understand and so use. One believes it to be a sort of
+ instinct atrophied by disuse in a complexer civilization. I remember very
+ well when I came first upon a wet meadow of yerba mansa, not knowing its
+ name or use. It looked potent; the cool, shiny leaves, the succulent, pink
+ stems and fruity bloom. A little touch, a hint, a word, and I should have
+ known what use to put them to. So I felt, unwilling to leave it until we
+ had come to an understanding. So a musician might have felt in the
+ presence of an instrument known to be within his province, but beyond his
+ power. It was with the relieved sense of having shaped a long surmise that
+ I watched the Senora Romero make a poultice of it for my burned hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On, down from the lower lakes to the village weirs, the brown and golden
+ disks of helenum have beauty as a sufficient excuse for being. The plants
+ anchor out on tiny capes, or mid-stream islets, with the nearly sessile
+ radicle leaves submerged. The flowers keep up a constant trepidation in
+ time with the hasty water beating at their stems, a quivering, instinct
+ with life, that seems always at the point of breaking into flight; just as
+ the babble of the watercourses always approaches articulation but never
+ quite achieves it. Although of wide range the helenum never makes itself
+ common through profusion, and may be looked for in the same places from
+ year to year. Another lake dweller that comes down to the ploughed lands
+ is the red columbine. ( C.truncata). It requires no encouragement other
+ than shade, but grows too rank in the summer heats and loses its wildwood
+ grace. A common enough orchid in these parts is the false lady's slipper
+ (Epipactis gigantea), one that springs up by any water where there is
+ sufficient growth of other sorts to give it countenance. It seems to
+ thrive best in an atmosphere of suffocation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The middle Sierras fall off abruptly eastward toward the high valleys.
+ Peaks of the fourteen thousand class, belted with sombre swathes of pine,
+ rise almost directly from the bench lands with no foothill approaches. At
+ the lower edge of the bench or mesa the land falls away, often by a fault,
+ to the river hollows, and along the drop one looks for springs or
+ intermittent swampy swales. Here the plant world resembles a little the
+ lake gardens, modified by altitude and the use the town folk put it to for
+ pasture. Here are cress, blue violets, potentilla, and, in the damp of the
+ willow fence-rows, white false asphodels. I am sure we make too free use
+ of this word FALSE in naming plants&mdash;false mallow, false lupine, and
+ the like. The asphodel is at least no falsifier, but a true lily by all
+ the heaven-set marks, though small of flower and run mostly to leaves, and
+ should have a name that gives it credit for growing up in such celestial
+ semblance. Native to the mesa meadows is a pale iris, gardens of it acres
+ wide, that in the spring season of full bloom make an airy fluttering as
+ of azure wings. Single flowers are too thin and sketchy of outline to
+ affect the imagination, but the full fields have the misty blue of mirage
+ waters rolled across desert sand, and quicken the senses to the
+ anticipation of things ethereal. A very poet's flower, I thought; not fit
+ for gathering up, and proving a nuisance in the pastures, therefore
+ needing to be the more loved. And one day I caught Winnenap' drawing out
+ from mid leaf a fine strong fibre for making snares. The borders of the
+ iris fields are pure gold, nearly sessile buttercups and a
+ creeping-stemmed composite of a redder hue. I am convinced that
+ English-speaking children will always have buttercups. If they do not
+ light upon the original companion of little frogs they will take the next
+ best and cherish it accordingly. I find five unrelated species loved by
+ that name, and as many more and as inappropriately called cowslips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By every mesa spring one may expect to find a single shrub of the
+ buckthorn, called of old time Cascara sagrada&mdash;the sacred bark. Up in
+ the canons, within the limit of the rains, it seeks rather a stony slope,
+ but in the dry valleys is not found away from water borders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all the valleys and along the desert edges of the west are considerable
+ areas of soil sickly with alkali-collecting pools, black and evil-smelling
+ like old blood. Very little grows hereabout but thick-leaved pickle weed.
+ Curiously enough, in this stiff mud, along roadways where there is
+ frequently a little leakage from canals, grows the only western
+ representative of the true heliotropes (Heliotropium curassavicum). It has
+ flowers of faded white, foliage of faded green, resembling the
+ "live-for-ever" of old gardens and graveyards, but even less attractive.
+ After so much schooling in the virtues of water-seeking plants, one is not
+ surprised to learn that its mucilaginous sap has healing powers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Last and inevitable resort of overflow waters is the tulares, great wastes
+ of reeds (Juncus) in sickly, slow streams. The reeds, called tules, are
+ ghostly pale in winter, in summer deep poisonous-looking green, the waters
+ thick and brown; the reed beds breaking into dingy pools, clumps of
+ rotting willows, narrow winding water lanes and sinking paths. The tules
+ grow inconceivably thick in places, standing man-high above the water;
+ cattle, no, not any fish nor fowl can penetrate them. Old stalks succumb
+ slowly; the bed soil is quagmire, settling with the weight as it fills and
+ fills. Too slowly for counting they raise little islands from the bog and
+ reclaim the land. The waters pushed out cut deeper channels, gnaw off the
+ edges of the solid earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tulares are full of mystery and malaria. That is why we have meant to
+ explore them and have never done so. It must be a happy mystery. So you
+ would think to hear the redwinged blackbirds proclaim it clear March
+ mornings. Flocks of them, and every flock a myriad, shelter in the dry,
+ whispering stems. They make little arched runways deep into the heart of
+ the tule beds. Miles across the valley one hears the clamor of their high,
+ keen flutings in the mating weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wild fowl, quacking hordes of them, nest in the tulares. Any day's venture
+ will raise from open shallows the great blue heron on his hollow wings.
+ Chill evenings the mallard drakes cry continually from the glassy pools,
+ the bittern's hollow boom rolls along the water paths. Strange and
+ farflown fowl drop down against the saffron, autumn sky. All day wings
+ beat above it hazy with speed; long flights of cranes glimmer in the
+ twilight. By night one wakes to hear the clanging geese go over. One
+ wishes for, but gets no nearer speech from those the reedy fens have
+ swallowed up. What they do there, how fare, what find, is the secret of
+ the tulares.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NURSLINGS OF THE SKY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Choose a hill country for storms. There all the business of the weather is
+ carried on above your horizon and loses its terror in familiarity. When
+ you come to think about it, the disastrous storms are on the levels, sea
+ or sand or plains. There you get only a hint of what is about to happen,
+ the fume of the gods rising from their meeting place under the rim of the
+ world; and when it breaks upon you there is no stay nor shelter. The
+ terrible mewings and mouthings of a Kansas wind have the added terror of
+ viewlessness. You are lapped in them like uprooted grass; suspect them of
+ a personal grudge. But the storms of hill countries have other business.
+ They scoop watercourses, manure the pines, twist them to a finer fibre,
+ fit the firs to be masts and spars, and, if you keep reasonably out of the
+ track of their affairs, do you no harm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They have habits to be learned, appointed paths, seasons, and warnings,
+ and they leave you in no doubt about their performances. One who builds
+ his house on a water scar or the rubble of a steep slope must take
+ chances. So they did in Overtown who built in the wash of Argus water, and
+ at Kearsarge at the foot of a steep, treeless swale. After twenty years
+ Argus water rose in the wash against the frail houses, and the piled snows
+ of Kearsarge slid down at a thunder peal over the cabins and the camp, but
+ you could conceive that it was the fault of neither the water nor the
+ snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first effect of cloud study is a sense of presence and intention in
+ storm processes. Weather does not happen. It is the visible manifestation
+ of the Spirit moving itself in the void. It gathers itself together under
+ the heavens; rains, snows, yearns mightily in wind, smiles; and the
+ Weather Bureau, situated advantageously for that very business, taps the
+ record on his instruments and going out on the streets denies his God, not
+ having gathered the sense of what he has seen. Hardly anybody takes
+ account of the fact that John Muir, who knows more of mountain storms than
+ any other, is a devout man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the high Sierras choose the neighborhood of the splintered peaks about
+ the Kern and King's river divide for storm study, or the short,
+ wide-mouthed canons opening eastward on high valleys. Days when the
+ hollows are steeped in a warm, winey flood the clouds came walking on the
+ floor of heaven, flat and pearly gray beneath, rounded and pearly white
+ above. They gather flock-wise, moving on the level currents that roll
+ about the peaks, lock hands and settle with the cooler air, drawing a veil
+ about those places where they do their work. If their meeting or parting
+ takes place at sunrise or sunset, as it often does, one gets the splendor
+ of the apocalypse. There will be cloud pillars miles high, snow-capped,
+ glorified, and preserving an orderly perspective before the unbarred door
+ of the sun, or perhaps mere ghosts of clouds that dance to some pied piper
+ of an unfelt wind. But be it day or night, once they have settled to their
+ work, one sees from the valley only the blank wall of their tents
+ stretched along the ranges. To get the real effect of a mountain storm you
+ must be inside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One who goes often into a hill country learns not to say: What if it
+ should rain? It always does rain somewhere among the peaks: the unusual
+ thing is that one should escape it. You might suppose that if you took any
+ account of plant contrivances to save their pollen powder against showers.
+ Note how many there are deep-throated and bell-flowered like the
+ pentstemons, how many have nodding pedicels as the columbine, how many
+ grow in copse shelters and grow there only. There is keen delight in the
+ quick showers of summer canons, with the added comfort, born of
+ experience, of knowing that no harm comes of a wetting at high altitudes.
+ The day is warm; a white cloud spies over the canon wall, slips up behind
+ the ridge to cross it by some windy pass, obscures your sun. Next you hear
+ the rain drum on the broad-leaved hellebore, and beat down the mimulus
+ beside the brook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You shelter on the lee of some strong pine with shut-winged butterflies
+ and merry, fiddling creatures of the wood. Runnels of rain water from the
+ glacier-slips swirl through the pine needles into rivulets; the streams
+ froth and rise in their banks. The sky is white with cloud; the sky is
+ gray with rain; the sky is clear. The summer showers leave no wake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such as these follow each other day by day for weeks in August weather.
+ Sometimes they chill suddenly into wet snow that packs about the lake
+ gardens clear to the blossom frills, and melts away harmlessly. Sometimes
+ one has the good fortune from a heather-grown headland to watch a
+ rain-cloud forming in mid-air. Out over meadow or lake region begins a
+ little darkling of the sky,&mdash;no cloud, no wind, just a smokiness such
+ as spirits materialize from in witch stories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It rays out and draws to it some floating films from secret canons. Rain
+ begins, "slow dropping veil of thinnest lawn;" a wind comes up and drives
+ the formless thing across a meadow, or a dull lake pitted by the glancing
+ drops, dissolving as it drives. Such rains relieve like tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same season brings the rains that have work to do, ploughing storms
+ that alter the face of things. These come with thunder and the play of
+ live fire along the rocks. They come with great winds that try the pines
+ for their work upon the seas and strike out the unfit. They shake down
+ avalanches of splinters from sky-line pinnacles and raise up sudden floods
+ like battle fronts in the canons against towns, trees, and boulders. They
+ would be kind if they could, but have more important matters. Such storms,
+ called cloud-bursts by the country folk, are not rain, rather the
+ spillings of Thor's cup, jarred by the Thunderer. After such a one the
+ water that comes up in the village hydrants miles away is white with
+ forced bubbles from the wind-tormented streams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All that storms do to the face of the earth you may read in the
+ geographies, but not what they do to our contemporaries. I remember one
+ night of thunderous rain made unendurably mournful by the houseless cry of
+ a cougar whose lair, and perhaps his family, had been buried under a slide
+ of broken boulders on the slope of Kearsarge. We had heard the heavy
+ detonation of the slide about the hour of the alpenglow, a pale rosy
+ interval in a darkling air, and judged he must have come from hunting to
+ the ruined cliff and paced the night out before it, crying a very human
+ woe. I remember, too, in that same season of storms, a lake made milky
+ white for days, and crowded out of its bed by clay washed into it by a
+ fury of rain, with the trout floating in it belly up, stunned by the shock
+ of the sudden flood. But there were trout enough for what was left of the
+ lake next year and the beginning of a meadow about its upper rim. What
+ taxed me most in the wreck of one of my favorite canons by cloud-burst was
+ to see a bobcat mother mouthing her drowned kittens in the ruined lair
+ built in the wash, far above the limit of accustomed waters, but not far
+ enough for the unexpected. After a time you get the point of view of gods
+ about these things to save you from being too pitiful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great snows that come at the beginning of winter, before there is yet
+ any snow except the perpetual high banks, are best worth while to watch.
+ These come often before the late bloomers are gone and while the migratory
+ birds are still in the piney woods. Down in the valley you see little but
+ the flocking of blackbirds in the streets, or the low flight of mallards
+ over the tulares, and the gathering of clouds behind Williamson. First
+ there is a waiting stillness in the wood; the pine-trees creak although
+ there is no wind, the sky glowers, the firs rock by the water borders. The
+ noise of the creek rises insistently and falls off a full note like a
+ child abashed by sudden silence in the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This changing of the stream-tone following tardily the changes of the sun
+ on melting snows is most meaningful of wood notes. After it runs a little
+ trumpeter wind to cry the wild creatures to their holes. Sometimes the
+ warning hangs in the air for days with increasing stillness. Only Clark's
+ crow and the strident jays make light of it; only they can afford to. The
+ cattle get down to the foothills and ground-inhabiting creatures make fast
+ their doors. It grows chill, blind clouds fumble in the canons; there will
+ be a roll of thunder, perhaps, or a flurry of rain, but mostly the snow is
+ born in the air with quietness and the sense of strong white pinions
+ softly stirred. It increases, is wet and clogging, and makes a white night
+ of midday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is seldom any wind with first snows, more often rain, but later,
+ when there is already a smooth foot or two over all the slopes, the drifts
+ begin. The late snows are fine and dry, mere ice granules at the wind's
+ will. Keen mornings after a storm they are blown out in wreaths and
+ banners from the high ridges sifting into the canons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once in a year or so we have a "big snow." The cloud tents are widened out
+ to shut in the valley and an outlying range or two and are drawn tight
+ against the sun. Such a storm begins warm, with a dry white mist that
+ fills and fills between the ridges, and the air is thick with formless
+ groaning. Now for days you get no hint of the neighboring ranges until the
+ snows begin to lighten and some shouldering peak lifts through a rent.
+ Mornings after the heavy snows are steely blue, two-edged with cold,
+ divinely fresh and still, and these are times to go up to the pine
+ borders. There you may find floundering in the unstable drifts "tainted
+ wethers" of the wild sheep, faint from age and hunger; easy prey. Even the
+ deer make slow going in the thick fresh snow, and once we found a
+ wolverine going blind and feebly in the white glare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No tree takes the snow stress with such ease as the silver fir. The
+ star-whorled, fan-spread branches droop under the soft wreaths&mdash;droop
+ and press flatly to the trunk; presently the point of overloading is
+ reached, there is a soft sough and muffled drooping, the boughs recover,
+ and the weighting goes on until the drifts have reached the midmost whorls
+ and covered up the branches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the snows are particularly wet and heavy they spread over the young
+ firs in green-ribbed tents wherein harbor winter loving birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All storms of desert hills, except wind storms, are impotent. East and
+ east of the Sierras they rise in nearly parallel ranges, desertward, and
+ no rain breaks over them, except from some far-strayed cloud or roving
+ wind from the California Gulf, and these only in winter. In summer the sky
+ travails with thunderings and the flare of sheet lightnings to win a few
+ blistering big drops, and once in a lifetime the chance of a torrent. But
+ you have not known what force resides in the mindless things until you
+ have known a desert wind. One expects it at the turn of the two seasons,
+ wet and dry, with electrified tense nerves. Along the edge of the mesa
+ where it drops off to the valley, dust devils begin to rise white and
+ steady, fanning out at the top like the genii out of the Fisherman's
+ bottle. One supposes the Indians might have learned the use of smoke
+ signals from these dust pillars as they learn most things direct from the
+ tutelage of the earth. The air begins to move fluently, blowing hot and
+ cold between the ranges. Far south rises a murk of sand against the sky;
+ it grows, the wind shakes itself, and has a smell of earth. The cloud of
+ small dust takes on the color of gold and shuts out the neighborhood, the
+ push of the wind is unsparing. Only man of all folk is foolish enough to
+ stir abroad in it. But being in a house is really much worse; no relief
+ from the dust, and a great fear of the creaking timbers. There is no
+ looking ahead in such a wind, and the bite of the small sharp sand on
+ exposed skin is keener than any insect sting. One might sleep, for the
+ lapping of the wind wears one to the point of exhaustion very soon, but
+ there is dread, in open sand stretches sometimes justified, of being over
+ blown by the drift. It is hot, dry, fretful work, but by going along the
+ ground with the wind behind, one may come upon strange things in its
+ tumultuous privacy. I like these truces of wind and heat that the desert
+ makes, otherwise I do not know how I should come by so many acquaintances
+ with furtive folk. I like to see hawks sitting daunted in shallow holes,
+ not daring to spread a feather, and doves in a row by the prickle-bushes,
+ and shut-eyed cattle, turned tail to the wind in a patient doze. I like
+ the smother of sand among the dunes, and finding small coiled snakes in
+ open places, but I never like to come in a wind upon the silly sheep. The
+ wind robs them of what wit they had, and they seem never to have learned
+ the self-induced hypnotic stupor with which most wild things endure
+ weather stress. I have never heard that the desert winds brought harm to
+ any other than the wandering shepherds and their flocks. Once below
+ Pastaria Little Pete showed me bones sticking out of the sand where a
+ flock of two hundred had been smothered in a bygone wind. In many places
+ the four-foot posts of a cattle fence had been buried by the wind-blown
+ dunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is enough occupation, when no storm is brewing, to watch the cloud
+ currents and the chambers of the sky. From Kearsarge, say, you look over
+ Inyo and find pink soft cloud masses asleep on the level desert air; south
+ of you hurries a white troop late to some gathering of their kind at the
+ back of Oppapago; nosing the foot of Waban, a woolly mist creeps south. In
+ the clean, smooth paths of the middle sky and highest up in air, drift,
+ unshepherded, small flocks ranging contrarily. You will find the proper
+ names of these things in the reports of the Weather Bureau&mdash;cirrus,
+ cumulus, and the like and charts that will teach by study when to sow and
+ take up crops. It is astonishing the trouble men will be at to find out
+ when to plant potatoes, and gloze over the eternal meaning of the skies.
+ You have to beat out for yourself many mornings on the windy headlands the
+ sense of the fact that you get the same rainbow in the cloud drift over
+ Waban and the spray of your garden hose. And not necessarily then do you
+ live up to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE LITTLE TOWN OF THE GRAPE VINES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There are still some places in the west where the quails cry "cuidado";
+ where all the speech is soft, all the manners gentle; where all the dishes
+ have chile in them, and they make more of the Sixteenth of September than
+ they do of the Fourth of July. I mean in particular El Pueblo de Las Uvas.
+ Where it lies, how to come at it, you will not get from me; rather would I
+ show you the heron's nest in the tulares. It has a peak behind it,
+ glinting above the tamarack pines, above a breaker of ruddy hills that
+ have a long slope valley-wards and the shoreward steep of waves toward the
+ Sierras.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Below the Town of the Grape Vines, which shortens to Las Uvas for common
+ use, the land dips away to the river pastures and the tulares. It shrouds
+ under a twilight thicket of vines, under a dome of cottonwood-trees,
+ drowsy and murmurous as a hive. Hereabouts are some strips of tillage and
+ the headgates that dam up the creek for the village weirs; upstream you
+ catch the growl of the arrastra. Wild vines that begin among the willows
+ lap over to the orchard rows, take the trellis and roof-tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is another town above Las Uvas that merits some attention, a town of
+ arches and airy crofts, full of linnets, blackbirds, fruit birds, small
+ sharp hawks, and mockingbirds that sing by night. They pour out piercing,
+ unendurably sweet cavatinas above the fragrance of bloom and musky smell
+ of fruit. Singing is in fact the business of the night at Las Uvas as
+ sleeping is for midday. When the moon comes over the mountain wall
+ new-washed from the sea, and the shadows lie like lace on the stamped
+ floors of the patios, from recess to recess of the vine tangle runs the
+ thrum of guitars and the voice of singing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Las Uvas they keep up all the good customs brought out of Old Mexico or
+ bred in a lotus-eating land; drink, and are merry and look out for
+ something to eat afterward; have children, nine or ten to a family, have
+ cock-fights, keep the siesta, smoke cigarettes and wait for the sun to go
+ down. And always they dance; at dusk on the smooth adobe floors,
+ afternoons under the trellises where the earth is damp and has a fruity
+ smell. A betrothal, a wedding, or a christening, or the mere proximity of
+ a guitar is sufficient occasion; and if the occasion lacks, send for the
+ guitar and dance anyway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this requires explanation. Antonio Sevadra, drifting this way from Old
+ Mexico with the flood that poured into the Tappan district after the first
+ notable strike, discovered La Golondrina. It was a generous lode and Tony
+ a good fellow; to work it he brought in all the Sevadras, even to the
+ twice-removed; all the Castros who were his wife's family, all the Saises,
+ Romeros, and Eschobars,&mdash;the relations of his relations-in-law. There
+ you have the beginning of a pretty considerable town. To these accrued
+ much of the Spanish California float swept out of the southwest by eastern
+ enterprise. They slacked away again when the price of silver went down,
+ and the ore dwindled in La Golondrina. All the hot eddy of mining life
+ swept away from that corner of the hills, but there were always those too
+ idle, too poor to move, or too easily content with El Pueblo de Las Uvas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nobody comes nowadays to the town of the grape vines except, as we say,
+ "with the breath of crying," but of these enough. All the low sills run
+ over with small heads. Ah, ah! There is a kind of pride in that if you did
+ but know it, to have your baby every year or so as the time sets, and keep
+ a full breast. So great a blessing as marriage is easily come by. It is
+ told of Ruy Garcia that when he went for his marriage license he lacked a
+ dollar of the clerk's fee, but borrowed it of the sheriff, who expected
+ reelection and exhibited thereby a commendable thrift. Of what account is
+ it to lack meal or meat when you may have it of any neighbor? Besides,
+ there is sometimes a point of honor in these things. Jesus Romero, father
+ of ten, had a job sacking ore in the Marionette which he gave up of his
+ own accord. "Eh, why?" said Jesus, "for my fam'ly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is so, senora," he said solemnly, "I go to the Marionette, I work, I
+ eat meat&mdash;pie&mdash;frijoles&mdash;good, ver' good. I come home
+ sad'day nigh' I see my fam'ly. I play lil' game poker with the boys, have
+ lil' drink wine, my money all gone. My fam'ly have no money, nothing eat.
+ All time I work at mine I eat, good, ver' good grub. I think sorry for my
+ fam'ly. No, no, senora, I no work no more that Marionette, I stay with my
+ fam'ly." The wonder of it is, I think, that the family had the same point
+ of view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every house in the town of the vines has its garden plot, corn and brown
+ beans and a row of peppers reddening in the sun; and in damp borders of
+ the irrigating ditches clumps of yerbasanta, horehound, catnip, and
+ spikenard, wholesome herbs and curative, but if no peppers then nothing at
+ all. You will have for a holiday dinner, in Las Uvas, soup with meat balls
+ and chile in it, chicken with chile, rice with chile, fried beans with
+ more chile, enchilada, which is corn cake with the sauce of chile and
+ tomatoes, onion, grated cheese, and olives, and for a relish chile tepines
+ passed about in a dish, all of which is comfortable and corrective to the
+ stomach. You will have wine which every man makes for himself, of good
+ body and inimitable bouquet, and sweets that are not nearly so nice as
+ they look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are two occasions when you may count on that kind of a meal; always
+ on the Sixteenth of September, and on the two-yearly visits of Father
+ Shannon. It is absurd, of course, that El Pueblo de Las Uvas should have
+ an Irish priest, but Black Rock, Minton, Jimville, and all that country
+ round do not find it so. Father Shannon visits them all, waits by the Red
+ Butte to confess the shepherds who go through with their flocks, carries
+ blessing to small and isolated mines, and so in the course of a year or so
+ works around to Las Uvas to bury and marry and christen. Then all the
+ little graves in the Campo Santo are brave with tapers, the brown pine
+ headboards blossom like Aaron's rod with paper roses and bright cheap
+ prints of Our Lady of Sorrows. Then the Senora Sevadra, who thinks herself
+ elect of heaven for that office, gathers up the original sinners, the
+ little Elijias, Lolas, Manuelitas, Joses, and Felipes, by dint of
+ adjurations and sweets smuggled into small perspiring palms, to fit them
+ for the Sacrament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I used to peek in at them, never so softly, in Dona Ina's living-room;
+ Raphael-eyed little imps, going sidewise on their knees to rest them from
+ the bare floor, candles lit on the mantel to give a religious air, and a
+ great sheaf of wild bloom before the Holy Family. Come Sunday they set out
+ the altar in the schoolhouse, with the fine-drawn altar cloths, the beaten
+ silver candlesticks, and the wax images, chief glory of Las Uvas, brought
+ up mule-back from Old Mexico forty years ago. All in white the
+ communicants go up two and two in a hushed, sweet awe to take the body of
+ their Lord, and Tomaso, who is priest's boy, tries not to look unduly
+ puffed up by his office. After that you have dinner and a bottle of wine
+ that ripened on the sunny slope of Escondito. All the week Father Shannon
+ has shriven his people, who bring clean conscience to the betterment of
+ appetite, and the Father sets them an example. Father Shannon is rather
+ big about the middle to accommodate the large laugh that lives in him, but
+ a most shrewd searcher of hearts. It is reported that one derives comfort
+ from his confessional, and I for my part believe it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The celebration of the Sixteenth, though it comes every year, takes as
+ long to prepare for as Holy Communion. The senoritas have each a new dress
+ apiece, the senoras a new rebosa. The young gentlemen have new silver
+ trimmings to their sombreros, unspeakable ties, silk handkerchiefs, and
+ new leathers to their spurs. At this time when the peppers glow in the
+ gardens and the young quail cry "cuidado," "have a care!" you can hear the
+ plump, plump of the metate from the alcoves of the vines where comfortable
+ old dames, whose experience gives them the touch of art, are pounding out
+ corn for tamales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ School-teachers from abroad have tried before now at Las Uvas to have
+ school begin on the first of September, but got nothing else to stir in
+ the heads of the little Castros, Garcias, and Romeros but feasts and
+ cock-fights until after the Sixteenth. Perhaps you need to be told that
+ this is the anniversary of the Republic, when liberty awoke and cried in
+ the provinces of Old Mexico. You are aroused at midnight to hear them
+ shouting in the streets, "Vive la Libertad!" answered from the houses and
+ the recesses of the vines, "Vive la Mexico!" At sunrise shots are fired
+ commemorating the tragedy of unhappy Maximilian, and then music, the
+ noblest of national hymns, as the great flag of Old Mexico floats up the
+ flag-pole in the bare little plaza of shabby Las Uvas. The sun over Pine
+ Mountain greets the eagle of Montezuma before it touches the vineyards and
+ the town, and the day begins with a great shout. By and by there will be a
+ reading of the Declaration of Independence and an address punctured by
+ vives; all the town in its best dress, and some exhibits of horsemanship
+ that make lathered bits and bloody spurs; also a cock-fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By night there will be dancing, and such music! old Santos to play the
+ flute, a little lean man with a saintly countenance, young Garcia whose
+ guitar has a soul, and Carrasco with the violin. They sit on a high
+ platform above the dancers in the candle flare, backed by the red, white,
+ and green of Old Mexico, and play fervently such music as you will not
+ hear otherwhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At midnight the flag comes down. Count yourself at a loss if you are not
+ moved by that performance. Pine Mountain watches whitely overhead,
+ shepherd fires glow strongly on the glooming hills. The plaza, the bare
+ glistening pole, the dark folk, the bright dresses, are lit ruddily by a
+ bonfire. It leaps up to the eagle flag, dies down, the music begins softly
+ and aside. They play airs of old longing and exile; slowly out of the dark
+ the flag drops down, bellying and falling with the midnight draught.
+ Sometimes a hymn is sung, always there are tears. The flag is down; Tony
+ Sevadra has received it in his arms. The music strikes a barbaric swelling
+ tune, another flag begins a slow ascent,&mdash;it takes a breath or two to
+ realize that they are both, flag and tune, the Star Spangled Banner,&mdash;a
+ volley is fired, we are back, if you please, in California of America.
+ Every youth who has the blood of patriots in him lays ahold on Tony
+ Sevadra's flag, happiest if he can get a corner of it. The music goes
+ before, the folk fall in two and two, singing. They sing everything,
+ America, the Marseillaise, for the sake of the French shepherds hereabout,
+ the hymn of Cuba, and the Chilian national air to comfort two families of
+ that land. The flag goes to Dona Ina's, with the candlesticks and the
+ altar cloths, then Las Uvas eats tamales and dances the sun up the slope
+ of Pine Mountain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You are not to suppose that they do not keep the Fourth, Washington's
+ Birthday, and Thanksgiving at the town of the grape vines. These make
+ excellent occasions for quitting work and dancing, but the Sixteenth is
+ the holiday of the heart. On Memorial Day the graves have garlands and new
+ pictures of the saints tacked to the headboards. There is great virtue in
+ an Ave said in the Camp of the Saints. I like that name which the Spanish
+ speaking people give to the garden of the dead, Campo Santo, as if it
+ might be some bed of healing from which blind souls and sinners rise up
+ whole and praising God. Sometimes the speech of simple folk hints at truth
+ the understanding does not reach. I am persuaded only a complex soul can
+ get any good of a plain religion. Your earthborn is a poet and a
+ symbolist. We breed in an environment of asphalt pavements a body of
+ people whose creeds are chiefly restrictions against other people's way of
+ life, and have kitchens and latrines under the same roof that houses their
+ God. Such as these go to church to be edified, but at Las Uvas they go for
+ pure worship and to entreat their God. The logical conclusion of the faith
+ that every good gift cometh from God is the open hand and the finer
+ courtesy. The meal done without buys a candle for the neighbor's dead
+ child. You do foolishly to suppose that the candle does no good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Las Uvas every house is a piece of earth&mdash;thick walled,
+ whitewashed adobe that keeps the even temperature of a cave; every man is
+ an accomplished horseman and consequently bowlegged; every family keeps
+ dogs, flea-bitten mongrels that loll on the earthen floors. They speak a
+ purer Castilian than obtains in like villages of Mexico, and the way they
+ count relationship everybody is more or less akin. There is not much
+ villainy among them. What incentive to thieving or killing can there be
+ when there is little wealth and that to be had for the borrowing! If they
+ love too hotly, as we say "take their meat before grace," so do their
+ betters. Eh, what! shall a man be a saint before he is dead? And besides,
+ Holy Church takes it out of you one way or another before all is done.
+ Come away, you who are obsessed with your own importance in the scheme of
+ things, and have got nothing you did not sweat for, come away by the brown
+ valleys and full-bosomed hills to the even-breathing days, to the
+ kindliness, earthiness, ease of El Pueblo de Las Uvas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>