第 16 节
作者:双曲线      更新:2021-04-30 17:21      字数:9322
  saddle is a point of vantage。            By it you are elevated above the country;
  from it   you   can see   clearly。      Quail   scuttle away  to   right and left;   heads
  ducked   low;   grouse   boom   solemnly   on   the   rigid   limbs   of   pines;   deer
  vanish through distant thickets to appear on yet more distant ridges; thence
  to   gaze   curiously;   their   great   ears   forward;   across   the   canon   the   bushes
  sway violently with the passage of a cinnamon bear among them;you see
  them all from your post of observation。               Your senses are always alert for
  these   things;   you   are   always   bending   from   your   saddle   to   examine   the
  tracks   and   signs     that   continually   offer   themselves   for   your   inspection
  and interpretation。
  Our     trail  of   this   summer      led   at  a   general    high    elevation;    with
  comparatively little climbing and comparatively easy traveling for days at
  a time。     Then suddenly we would find ourselves on the brink of a great
  box canon from three to seven thousand feet deep; several miles wide; and
  utterly precipitous。       In the bottom of this canon would be good feed; fine
  groves of trees; and a river of some size in which swam fish。                     The trail to
  the    canon…bed      was    always     bad;   and    generally    dangerous。       In    many
  instances we  found   it   bordered   with the bones of   horses that had   failed。
  The river had somehow to be forded。                We would camp a day or so in the
  good feed and among the fine groves of trees; fish in the river; and then
  address ourselves with much reluctance to the ascent of the other bad and
  dangerous   trail   on   the   other   side。     After   that;   in   the   natural   course   of
  events;   subject   to   variation;   we   could   expect   nice   trails;   the   comfort   of
  easy   travel;   pines;   cedars;   redwoods;   and   joy   of   life   until   another   great
  cleft opened before us or another great mountain…pass barred our way。
  This   was   the  web   and   woof   of   our  summer。        But   through   it   ran   the
  patterns of fantastic delight such as the West alone can offer a man's utter
  disbelief   in   them。     Some   of   these   patterns   stand   out   in   memory   with
  peculiar distinctness。
  53
  … Page 54…
  THE MOUNTAINS
  Below Farewell Gap is a wide canon with high walls of dark rock; and
  down those   walls   run   many streams   of   water。         They are   white   as   snow
  with the dash of their descent; but so distant that the eye cannot distinguish
  their motion。      In the half light of dawn; with the yellow of sunrise behind
  the    mountains;     they   look    like  gauze    streamers     thrown    out   from    the
  windows   of   morning   to   celebrate   the   solemn   pageant   of   the   passing   of
  many hills。
  Again; I know of a canon whose westerly wall is colored in the dull
  rich   colors;   the   fantastic   patterns   of   a   Moorish   tapestry。   Umber;   seal
  brown; red; terra… cotta; orange; Nile green; emerald; purple; cobalt blue;
  gray; lilac;  and   many  other colors;  all   rich   with the   depth of   satin; glow
  wonderful as the craftiest textures。          Only here the fabric is five miles long
  and half a mile wide。
  There is no use in telling of these things。            They; and many others of
  their like; are marvels; and exist; but you cannot tell about them; for the
  simple   reason   that   the   average   reader   concludes   at   once   you   must   be
  exaggerating;   must   be   carried   away   by   the   swing   of   words。      The   cold
  sober   truth   is;   you   cannot   exaggerate。     They   haven't   made   the   words。
  Talk as extravagantly as you wish to one who will in the most childlike
  manner   believe   every   syllable   you   utter。      Then   take   him   into   the   Big
  Country。      He will probably say; 〃Why; you didn't tell me it was going to
  be anything like THIS!〃          We in the East have no standards of comparison
  either as regards size or as regards colorespecially color。                Some people
  once directed me to 〃The Gorge〃 on the New England coast。                        I couldn't
  find it。    They led me to it; and rhapsodized over its magnificent terror。                 I
  could   have   ridden   a   horse   into   the   ridiculous   thing。    As   for   color;   no
  Easterner believes in it when such men as Lungren or Parrish transposit it
  faithfully; any more than a Westerner would believe in the autumn foliage
  of   our  own   hardwoods;   or   an   Englishman   in   the   glories   of   our   gaudiest
  sunsets。     They are all true。
  In   the   mountains;     the   high    mountains     above     the  seven    or   eight
  thousand   foot   level;   grows   an   affair   called   the   snow…plant。    It   is;   when
  full grown; about two feet in height; and shaped like a loosely constructed
  pine…cone set up on end。          Its entire substance is like wax; and the whole
  54
  … Page 55…
  THE MOUNTAINS
  concernstalk;        broad     curling    leaves;     and    allis   a   brilliant    scarlet。
  Sometime you will ride through the twilight of deep pine woods growing
  on the slope of the mountain; a twilight intensified; rendered more sacred
  to   your   mood   by   the   external   brilliancy   of   a   glimpse   of   vivid   blue   sky
  above   dazzling   snow   mountains   far   away。             Then;   in   this   monotone   of
  dark green frond and dull brown trunk and deep olive shadow; where; like
  the ordered library of one with quiet tastes; nothing breaks the harmony of
  unobtrusive   tone;   suddenly   flames   the   vivid   red   of   a   snow…plant。           You
  will never forget it。
  Flowers in general seem to possess this concentrated                     brilliancy both
  of color and of perfume。            You will ride into and out of strata of perfume
  as    sharply    defined     as  are   the   quartz    strata   on   the   ridges。    They      lie
  sluggish and cloying in the hollows; too heavy to rise on the wings of the
  air。
  As   for   color;   you   will   see   all   sorts   of   queer   things。   The   ordered
  flower…science of your childhood has gone mad。                     You recognize some of
  your old friends; but strangely distorted and changed;even the dear old
  〃butter   'n   eggs〃   has   turned   pink!     Patches   of   purple;   of   red;  of   blue;   of
  yellow;   of   orange   are   laid   in   the   hollows   or   on   the   slopes   like   brilliant
  blankets out to dry in the sun。            The fine grasses are spangled with them;
  so   that   in   the   cup   of   the   great   fierce   countries   the   meadows   seem   like
  beautiful green ornaments enameled with jewels。                     The Mariposa Lily; on
  the   other   hand;   is   a   poppy…shaped   flower   varying   from   white   to   purple;
  and with each petal decorated by an 〃eye〃 exactly like those on the great
  Cecropia   or   Polyphemus   moths;   so   that   their   effect   is   that   of   a   flock   of
  gorgeous butterflies come to rest。             They hover over the meadows poised。
  A   movement        would     startle   them   to   flight;   only   the   proper    movement
  somehow never comes。
  The great redwoods; too; add to the colored… edition impression of the
  whole   country。       A  redwood;   as   perhaps   you   know;   is   a   tremendous   big
  tree    sometimes       as  big   as   twenty     feet  in   diameter。      It  is   exquisitely
  proportioned   like   a   fluted   column   of   noble   height。         Its   bark   is   slightly
  furrowed longitudinally; and of a peculiar elastic appearance that lends it
  an   almost   perfect   illusion   of   breathing   animal   life。      The   color   is   a   rich
  55
  … Page 56…
  THE MOUNTAINS
  umber red。       Sometimes in the early morning or the late afternoon; when
  all the rest of the forest is cast in shadow; these massive trunks will glow
  as though incandescent。          The Trail; wonderful always; here seems to pass
  through   the   outer   portals   of   the   great   flaming   regions   where   dwell   the
  risings and fallings of days。
  As    you    follow    the  Trail   up;   you    will  enter    also  the   permanent
  dwelling…places of the seasons。           With us each visits for the space of a few
  months; then steals away to give place to the next。                Whither they go you
  have   not   known   until