Foss rapidly and somewhat plaintively brought the
conversation to an end; and he returned to his night's grog
at Fossville, while I strolled forth again on Calistoga high
street. But it was an odd thing that here, on what we are
accustomed to consider the very skirts of
civilization, I
should have used the telephone for the first time in my
civilized
career. So it goes in these young countries;
telephones, and telegraphs, and newspapers, and
advertisements
running far ahead among the Indians and the
grizzly bears.
Alone, on the other side of the railway, stands the Springs
Hotel, with its
attendantcottages. The floor of the
valleyis
extremely level to the very roots of the hills; only here
and there a hillock, crowned with pines, rises like the
barrow of some
chieftain famed in war; and right against one
of these hillocks is the Springs Hotel - is or was; for since
I was there the place has been destroyed by fire, and has
risen again from its ashes. A lawn runs about the house, and
the lawn is in its turn surrounded by a
system of little
five-roomed
cottages, each with a verandah and a weedy palm
before the door. Some of the
cottages are let to residents,
and these are wreathed in flowers. The rest are occupied by
ordinary visitors to the Hotel; and a very pleasant way this
is, by which you have a little country
cottage of your own,
without
domestic burthens, and by the day or week.
The whole neighbourhood of Mount Saint Helena is full of
sulphur and of boiling springs. The Geysers are famous; they
were the great health
resort of the Indians before the coming
of the whites. Lake County is dotted with spas; Hot Springs
and White Sulphur Springs are the names of two stations on
the Napa Valley railroad; and Calistoga itself seems to
repose on a mere film above a boiling, subterranean lake. At
one end of the hotel
enclosure are the springs from which it
takes its name, hot enough to scald a child
seriously while I
was there. At the other end, the
tenant of a
cottage sank a
well, and there also the water came up boiling. It keeps
this end of the
valley as warm as a toast. I have gone
across to the hotel a little after five in the morning, when
a sea fog from the Pacific was
hanging thick and gray, and
dark and dirty
overhead, and found the
thermometer had been
up before me, and had already climbed among the nineties; and
in the
stress of the day it was sometimes too hot to move
about.
But in spite of this heat from above and below, doing one on
both sides, Calistoga was a pleasant place to dwell in;
beautifully green, for it was then that
favoured moment in
the Californian year, when the rains are over and the dusty
summer has not yet set in; often visited by fresh airs, now
from the mountain, now across Sonoma from the sea; very
quiet, very idle, very silent but for the
breezes and the
cattle bells afield. And there was something
satisfactory in
the sight of that great mountain that enclosed us to the
north: whether it stood, robed in
sunshine, quaking to its
topmost
pinnacle with the heat and
brightness of the day; or
whether it set itself to weaving vapours, wisp after wisp
growing, trembling,
fleeting, and fading in the blue.
The tangled, woody, and almost trackless foot-hills that
enclose the
valley, shutting it off from Sonoma on the west,
and from Yolo on the east - rough as they were in outline,
dug out by winter streams, crowned by cliffy bluffs and
nodding pine trees - wore dwarfed into satellites by the bulk
and
bearing of Mount Saint Helena. She over-towered them by
two-thirds of her own
stature. She excelled them by the
boldness of her
profile. Her great bald
summit, clear of
trees and
pasture, a cairn of
quartz and cinnabar, rejected
kinship with the dark and
shaggywilderness of
lesser hill-
tops.
CHAPTER II - THE PETRIFIED FOREST
WE drove off from the Springs Hotel about three in the
afternoon. The sun warmed me to the heart. A broad, cool
wind streamed pa
uselessly down the
valley, laden with
perfume. Up at the top stood Mount Saint Helena, a bulk of
mountain, bare atop, with tree-fringed spurs, and radiating
warmth. Once we saw it framed in a grove of tall and
exquisitely
graceful white oaks, in line and colour a
finished
composition. We passed a cow stretched by the
roadside, her bell slowly
beating time to the
movement of her
ruminating jaws, her big red face crawled over by half a
dozen flies, a
monument of content.
A little farther, and we struck to the left up a mountain
road, and for two hours threaded one
valley after another,
green, tangled, full of noble
timber, giving us every now and
again a sight of Mount Saint Helena and the blue hilly
distance, and crossed by many streams, through which we
splashed to the carriage-step. To the right or the left,
there was
scarce any trace of man but the road we followed; I
think we passed but one ranchero's house in the whole
distance, and that was closed and smokeless. But we had the
society of these bright streams - dazzlingly clear, as is
their wont, splashing from the wheels in diamonds, and
striking a
livelycoolness through the
sunshine. And what
with the
innumerablevariety of greens, the masses of foliage
tossing in the
breeze, the glimpses of distance, the descents
into
seemingly impenetrable thickets, the
continual dodging
of the road which made haste to
plunge again into the covert,
we had a fine sense of woods, and spring-time, and the open
air.
Our driver gave me a lecture by the way on Californian trees
- a thing I was much in need of, having fallen among painters
who know the name of nothing, and Mexicans who know the name
of nothing in English. He taught me the madrona, the
manzanita, the buck-eye, the maple; he showed me the crested
mountain quail; he showed me where some young redwoods were
already spiring heavenwards from the ruins of the old; for in
this district all had already perished: redwoods and
redskins, the two noblest indigenous living things, alike
condemned.
At length, in a
lonely dell, we came on a huge
wooden gate
with a sign upon it like an inn. "The Petrified Forest.
Proprietor: C. Evans," ran the legend. Within, on a knoll
of sward, was the house of the
proprietor, and another
smaller house hard by to serve as a museum, where photographs
and petrifactions were retailed. It was a pure little isle
of touristry among these
solitary hills.
The
proprietor was a brave old white-faced Swede. He had
wandered this way, Heaven knows how, and taken up his acres -
I forget how many years ago - all alone, bent double with
sciatica, and with six bits in his pocket and an axe upon his
shoulder. Long,
useless years of seafaring had thus
discharged him at the end, penniless and sick. Without doubt
he had tried his luck at the diggings, and got no good from
that; without doubt he had loved the bottle, and lived the
life of Jack
ashore. But at the end of these adventures,
here he came; and, the place hitting his fancy, down he sat
to make a new life of it, far from crimps and the salt sea.
And the very sight of his ranche had done him good. It was
"the handsomest spot in the Californy mountains." "Isn't it
handsome, now?" he said. Every penny he makes goes into that