The
descent was
accomplished without
disaster, though several of the
party had narrow escapes. One slipped and fell, and as he shot past
me seemed to be going to certain death. So steep was the ice slope no
one could move to help him, but
fortunately, keeping his presence of
mine, he threw himself on his face and digging his alpenstock into the
ice, gradually retarded his
motion until he came to rest. Another
broke through a slim
bridge over a crevasse, but his momentum at the
time carried him against the lower edge and only his alpenstock was
lost in the abyss. Thus crippled by the loss of his staff, we had to
lower him the rest of the way down the dome by means of the rope we
carried. Falling rocks from the upper precipitous part of the ridge
were also a source of danger, as they came whizzing past in successive
volleys; but none told on us, and when we at length gained the gentle
slopes of the lower ice fields, we ran and slid at our ease, making
fast, glad time, all care and danger past, and arrived at our beloved
Cloud Camp before sundown.
We were rather weak from want of
nourishment, and some suffered from
sunburn,
notwithstanding the
partialprotection of glasses and veils;
otherwise, all were unscathed and well. The view we enjoyed from the
summit could hardly be surpassed in sublimity and
grandeur; but one
feels far from home so high in the sky, so much so that one is
inclined to guess that, apart from the
acquisition of knowledge and
the exhilaration of climbing, more pleasure is to be found at the foot
of the mountains than on their tops. Doubly happy, however, is the
man to whom lofty mountain tops are within reach, for the lights that
shine there illumine all that lies below.
XXI
The Physical and Climatic Characteristics of Oregon
Oregon is a large, rich,
compact section of the west side of the
continent, containing nearly a hundred thousand square miles of deep,
wet
evergreen woods,
fertilevalleys, icy mountains, and high, rolling
wind-swept plains, watered by the
majestic Columbia River and its
countless branches. It is bounded on the north by Washington, on the
east by Idaho, on the south by California and Nevada, and on the west
by the Pacific Ocean. It is a grand,
hearty,
wholesome, foodful
wilderness and, like Washington, once a part of the Oregon Territory,
abounds in bold,
far-reaching contrasts as to
scenery,
climate, soil,
and productions. Side by side there is drouth on a grand scale and
overflowing
moisture; flinty,
sharply cut lava beds,
gloomy and
forbidding, and smooth,
flowery lawns; cool bogs,
exquisitely plushy
and soft, overshadowed by jagged crags
barren as icebergs; forests
seemingly
boundless and plains with no tree in sight; presenting a
wide range of conditions, but as a whole
favorable to industry.
Natural
wealth of an
available kind abounds nearly everywhere,
inviting the farmer, the stock-raiser, the lumberman, the fisherman,
the
manufacturer, and the miner, as well as the free walker in search
of knowledge and wildness. The
scenery is
mostly of a comfortable,
assuring kind, grand and inspiring without too much of that dreadful
overpowering sublimity and exuberance which tend to
discourage effort
and cast people into inaction and superstition.
Ever since Oregon was first heard of in the
romantic, adventurous,
hunting, trapping Wild West days, it seems to have been regarded as
the most
attractive and
promising of all the Pacific countries for
farmers. While yet the whole region as well as the way to it was
wild, ere a single road or
bridge was built, undaunted by the
trackless thousand-mile distances and scalping, cattle-stealing
Indians, long trains of covered wagons began to crawl wearily
westward, crossing how many plains, rivers, ridges, and mountains,
fighting the painted
savages and
weariness and
famine. Setting out
from the
frontier of the old West in the spring as soon as the grass
would support their cattle, they pushed on up the Platte, making haste
slowly, however, that they might not be caught in the storms of winter
ere they reached the promised land. They crossed the Rocky Mountains
to Fort Hall;
thence followed down the Snake River for three or four
hundred miles, their cattle limping and failing on the rough lava
plains; swimming the
streams too deep to be forded, making boats out
of wagon-boxes for the women and children and goods, or where trees
could be had, lashing together logs for rafts. Thence, crossing the
Blue Mountains and the plains of the Columbia, they followed the river
to the Dalles. Here winter would be upon them, and before a wagon
road was built across the Cascade Mountains the toil-worn emigrants
would be compelled to leave their cattle and wagons until the
following summer, and, in the mean time, with the
assistance of the
Hudson's Bay Company, make their way to the Willamette Valley on the
river with rafts and boats.
How strange and
remote these
trying times have already become! They
are now dim as if a thousand years had passed over them. Steamships
and locomotives with
magical influence have well-nigh abolished the
old distances and dangers, and brought forward the New West into near
and familiar
companionship with the rest of the world.
Purely wild for unnumbered centuries, a
paradise of oily, salmon-fed
Indians, Oregon is now
roughly settled in part and surveyed, its
rivers and mountain ranges, lakes,
valleys, and plains have been
traced and mapped in a general way,
civilization is
beginning to take
root, towns are springing up and flourishing
vigorously like a crop
adapted to the soil, and the whole kindly
wilderness lies invitingly
near with all its
wealth open and ripe for use.
In sailing along the Oregon coast one sees but few more signs of human
occupation than did Juan de Fuca three centuries ago. The shore
bluffs rise
abruptly from the waves, forming a wall apparently
unbroken, though many short rivers from the coast range of mountains
and two from the
interior have made narrow openings on their way to
the sea. At the mouths of these rivers good harbors have been
discovered for coasting vessels, which are of great importance to the
lumbermen, dairymen, and farmers of the coast region. But little or
nothing of these appear in general views, only a simple gray wall
nearly straight, green along the top, and the forest stretching back
into the mountains as far as the eye can reach.
Going
ashore, we find few long reaches of sand where one may saunter,
or
meadows, save the brown and
purplemeadows of the sea, overgrown
with
slippery kelp, swashed and swirled in the
restless breakers. The
abruptness of the shore allows the
massive waves that have come from
far over the broad Pacific to get close to the bluffs ere they break,
and the thundering shock shakes the rocks to their foundations. No
calm comes to these shores. Even in the finest weather, when the
ships off shore are becalmed and their sails hang loose against the
mast, there is always a
wreath of foam at the base of these bluffs.
The breakers are ever in bloom and
crystal brine is ever in the air.
A
scramble along the Oregon sea bluffs proves as
richly exciting to
lovers of wild beauty as heart could wish. Here are three hundred
miles of pictures of rock and water in black and white, or gray and
white, with more or less of green and yellow,
purple and blue. The
rocks, glistening in
sunshine and foam, are never
wholly dry--many of
them marvels of wave-sculpture and most
imposing in bulk and bearing,
standing
boldly forward, monuments of a thousand storms, types of
permanence,
holding the homes and places of
refuge of multitudes of
seafaring animals in their keeping, yet ever
wasting away. How grand
the songs of the waves about them, every wave a fine,
hearty storm in
itself,
taking its rise on the breezy plains of the sea, perhaps
thousands of miles away, traveling with
majestic, slow-heaving
deliberation, reaching the end of its journey,
striking its blow,
bursting into a mass of white and pink bloom, then falling spent and
withered to give place to the next in the endless
procession, thus
keeping up the
glorious show and
glorious song through all times and
seasons forever!
Terribly
impressive as is this cliff and wave
scenery when the skies
are bright and kindly
sunshine makes rainbows in the spray, it is
doubly so in dark, stormy nights, when, crouching in some hollow on
the top of some jutting
headland, we may gaze and listen undisturbed
in the heart of it. Perhaps now and then we may dimly see the tops of
the highest breakers, looking
ghostly in the gloom; but when the water
happens to be phosphorescent, as it
oftentimes is, then both the sea
and the rocks are
visible, and the wild, exulting, up-dashing spray
burns, every
particle of it, and is combined into one glowing mass of
white fire; while back in the woods and along the bluffs and crags of
the shore the storm wind roars, and the rain-floods, gathering
strength and coming from far and near, rush wildly down every gulch to
the sea, as if eager to join the waves in their grand,
savage harmony;
deep
calling unto deep in the heart of the great, dark night, making a
sight and a song
unspeakablesublime and
glorious.
In the pleasant weather of summer, after the rainy season is past and
only
occasionalrefreshingshowers fall, washing the sky and bringing
out the
fragrance of the flowers and the
evergreens, then one may
enjoy a fine, free walk all the way across the State from the sea to