TO EVE
"The Comfortress of Unsuccess"
Preface ix
The Land of Little Rain
1
Water Trails of the
Ceriso 13
The Scavengers 24
The Pocket Hunter 32
Shoshone Land 43
Jimville--A Bret Harte
Town 54
My Neighbor's Field 64
The Mesa Trail 73
The Basket Maker 83
The Streets of the
Mountains 93
Water Borders 104
Other Water Borders 115
Nurslings of the Sky
126
The Little Town of the
Grape Vines 137
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.
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.
The country where you
may have sight and touch of that which is written lies between the high Sierras
south from Yosemite--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,--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.
East away from the
Sierras, south from Panamint and Amargosa, east and south many an uncounted
mile, is the Country of Lost Borders.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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--there is no
help for any of these things.
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.
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!
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. 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
And yet--and yet--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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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?
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.
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.
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 be 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. 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.
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,--and
it is usually the best way,--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.
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.
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.
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. 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.
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.
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.
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."
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.
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 water courses. 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.
It is a very squalid
tragedy,--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.
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.
There are three kinds
of noises buzzards make,--it is impossible to call them notes,--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.
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.
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.
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.
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,--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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 tailorwise 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.
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--he fed the
burros in this when there was need--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.
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,--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.
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,--remember that I can never be
depended on to get the terms right,--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--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 neve 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.
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.
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,--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.
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--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--for this I could never forgive him--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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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,--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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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--oh the soft wonder of it!--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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
And Winnenap' will not
any more. He died, as do most medicine-men of the Paiutes.
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.
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.
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 sweat-houses, and
under the hands of the medicine-men. Even the drugs of the white physician had
no power.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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,--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.
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.
Squaw Gulch is a very
sharp, steep, ragged-walled ravine, and that part of Jimville which is built in
it has only one street,--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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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,--"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.
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.
Says Three Finger,
relating the history of the Mariposa, "I took it off'n Tom Beatty, cheap,
after his brother Bill was shot."
Says Jim Jenkins,
"What was the matter of him?"
"Who? Bill? Abe
Johnson shot him; he was fooling around Johnson's wife, an' Tom sold me the
mine dirt cheap."
"Why didn't he
work it himself?"
"Him? Oh, he was
laying for Abe and calculated to have to leave the country pretty quick."
"Huh!" says
Jim Jenkins, and the tale flows smoothly on.
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.
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,--it wants the
German to coin a word for that,--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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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. 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.
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.
It is a still field,
this of my neighbor's, though so busy, and admirably compounded for variety and
pleasantness,--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.
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.
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,--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.
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.
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,--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.
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,--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. 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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--the rest of him is as impervious as one of his
own sheep--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.
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.
"A man," says
Seyavi of the campoodie, "must have a woman, but a woman who has a child
will do very well."
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.
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.
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.
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. 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.
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,--these are kitchen ware,--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,--so you will still find them in
fortunate years,--and in the famine time the women cut their long hair to make
snares when the flocks came morning and evening to the springs.
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,--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. 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.
Before Seyavi made
baskets for the satisfaction of desire,--for that is a house-bred theory of art
that makes anything more of it,--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.
"And what flower
did you wear, Seyavi?"
"I, ah,--the white
flower of twining (clematis), on my body and my hair, and so I sang:--
"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." 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.
"What good will
your dead get, Seyavi, of the baskets you burn?" said I, coveting them for
my own collection.
Thus Seyavi, "As
much good as yours of the flowers you strew."
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.
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--and it was some years after the war before there began to be any
towns--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.
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.
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.
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,--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.
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.
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,
--easy to fix the date of that christening,--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.
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.
Never believe what you
are told, that midsummer is the best time to go up the streets of the
mountain--well--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.
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 valleyward 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.
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. 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.
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.
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.
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,--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,--sign that the snow
water has come down from the heated high ridges,--it is time to light the
evening fire. When it drops off a note--but you will not know it except the
Douglas squirrel tells you with his high, fluty chirrup from the pines' aerial
gloom--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.
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.
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.
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.
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."
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.
I like that name the
Indians give to the mountain of Lone Pine, and find it pertinent to my
subject,--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.
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--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.
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.
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. 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.
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.
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.
The highest limit of
conifers--in the middle Sierras, the white bark pine--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.
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.
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--blue--blue--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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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,--there are no foothills on this eastern slope,--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.
The birch--the
brown-bark western birch characteristic of lower stream tangles--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.
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.
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--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.
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,--you can see at once that Judson had the racial
advantage,--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. 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--that was the way he expressed it. She was a
very large lady, and a longhandled 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.
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.
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.
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.
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. 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.
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.
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--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.
By every mesa spring
one may expect to find a single shrub of the buckthorn, called of old time
Cascara sagrada --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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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. 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.
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,--no cloud, no wind,
just a smokiness such as spirits materialize from in witch stories.
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.
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.
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.
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. 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.
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.
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.
No tree takes the snow
stress with such ease as the silver fir. The star-whorled, fan-spread branches
droop under the soft wreaths--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. When the snows are
particularly wet and heavy they spread over the young firs in green-ribbed
tents wherein harbor winter loving birds.
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.
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--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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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,--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.
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."
"It is so,
senora," he said solemnly, "I go to the Marionette, I work, I eat
meat--pie--frijoles--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.
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
yerba santa , 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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,--it takes a breath
or two to realize that they are both, flag and tune, the Star Spangled
Banner,--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.
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.
At Las Uvas every house
is a piece of earth--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.