The trains run out of Denver like
quick-silver,-this is the prettiest thing
I can say of Denver. They trickle down into high,
green valleys, under the shadow of snow-capped cliffs.
There the grass is of the liveliest tint-a
kind of salad-green. The air is sweet and fine;
everything looks clean, well kept, well swept-perhaps
the wind is the keeper and the sweeper. All along
the way there is a very striking contrast of color
in rock, meadows, and sky; the whole is as appetizing
to the sight as a newly varnished picture.
We didn’t down brakes until
we reached Colorado Springs; there we changed cars
for Manitou. Already the castellated rocks were
filling us with childish delight. Fungi decked
the cliffs above us: colossal, petrified fungi,
painted Indian fashion. At any rate, there is
a kind of wild, out-of-door, subdued harmony in the
rock-tints upon the exterior slopes of the famed Garden
of the Gods, quite in keeping with the spirit of the
decorative red-man. Within that garden color and
form run riot, and Manitou is the restful outpost
of this erratic wilderness.
It is fitting that Manitou should
be approached in a rather primitive manner. I
was glad when we were very politely invited to get
out of the train and walk a plank over a puddle that
for a moment submerged the track; glad when we were
advised to foot it over a trestle-bridge that sagged
in the swift current of a swollen stream; and gladder
still when our locomotive began to puff and blow and
slaken its pace as we climbed up into the mouth of
a ravine fragrant with the warm scents of summer-albeit
we could boast but a solitary brace of cars, and these
small ones, and not overcrowded at that.
Only think of it! We were scarcely
three hours by rail from Denver; and yet here, in
Manitou, were the very elements so noticeably lacking
there. Nature in her natural state-primitive
forever; the air seasoned with the pungent spices
of odoriferous herbs; the sweetest sunshine in abundance,
and all the shade that makes sunshine most agreeable.
Manitou is a picturesque hamlet that
has scattered itself up and down a deep ravine, regardless
of the limiting lines of the surveyor. The railway
station at Manitou might pose for a porter’s
lodge in the prettiest park in England. Surely
there is hope for America when she can so far curb
her vulgar love of the merely practical as to do that
sort of thing at the right time and in the right place.
A fine stream brawls through the bed
of this lovely vale. There are rustic cottages
that cluster upon the brink of the stream, as if charmed
by the music of its song; and I am sure that the cottagers
dwelling therein have no wish to hang their harps
upon any willows whatever; or to mingle their tears,
though these were indeed the waters of Babylon that
flow softly night and day through the green groves
of Manitou. The breeze stirs the pulse like a
tonic; birds, bees, and butterflies dance in the air;
the leaves have the gloss of varnish-there
is no dust there,-and everything is cleanly,
cheerful and reposeful. From the hotel veranda
float the strains of harp and viol; at intervals during
the day and night music helps us to lift up our hearts;
there is nothing like it-except more of
it. There is not overmuch dressing among the
women, nor the beastly spirit of loudness among the
men; the domestic atmosphere is undisturbed.
A newspaper printed on a hand-press, and distributed
by the winds for aught I know, has its office in the
main lane of the village; its society column creates
no scandal. A solitary bicycle that flashes like
a shooting star across the placid foreground is our
nearest approach to an event worth mentioning.
Loungers lounge at the springs as
if they really enjoyed it. An amiable booth-boy
displays his well-dressed and handsomely mounted foxskins,
his pressed flowers of Colorado, his queer mineralogical
jewelry, and his uncouth geological specimens in the
shape of hideous bric-a-brac, as if he took pleasure
in thus entertaining the public; while everybody has
the cosiest and most sociable time over the counter,
and buys only by accident at last.
There are rock gorges in Manitou,
through which the Indian tribes were wont noiselessly
to defile when on the war-path in the brave days of
old; gorges where currents of hot air breathe in your
face like the breath of some fierce animal. There
are brilliant and noisy cataracts and cascades that
silver the rocks with spray; and a huge winding cavern
filled with mice and filth and the blackness of darkness,
and out of which one emerges looking like a tramp
and feeling like-well! There are springs
bubbling and steeping and stagnating by the wayside;
springs containing carbonates of soda, lithia, lime,
magnesia, and iron; sulphates of potassa and soda,
chloride of sodium and silica, in various solutions.
Some of these are sweeter than honey in the honeycomb;
some of them smell to heaven-what more
can the pampered palate of man desire?
Let all those who thirst for chalybeate
waters bear in mind that the Ute Iron Spring of Manitou
is 800 feet higher than St. Catarina, the highest
iron spring in Europe, and nearly 1000 feet higher
than St. Moritz; and that the bracing air at an elevation
of 6400 feet has probably as much to do with the recovery
of the invalid as has the judicious quaffing of medicinal
waters. Of pure iron springs, the famous Schwalbach
contains rather more iron than the Ute Iron, and Spa
rather less. On the whole, Manitou has the advantage
of the most celebrated medicinal springs in Europe,
and has a climate even in midwinter preferable to all
of them.
On the edge of the pretty hamlet at
Manitou stands a cottage half hidden like a bird’s
nest among the trees. I saw only the peaks of
gables under green boughs; and I wondered when I was
informed that the lovely spot had been long untenanted,
and wondered still more when I learned that it was
the property of good Grace Greenwood. Will she
ever cease wandering, and return to weave a new chaplet
of greenwood leaves gathered beneath the eaves of
her mountain home?
At the top of the village street stands
Pike’s Peak-at least it seems to
stand there when viewed through the telescopic air.
It is in reality a dozen miles distant; but is easily
approached by a winding trail, over which ladies in
the saddle may reach the glorious snow-capped summit
and return to Manitou between breakfast and supper-unless
one should prefer to be rushed up and down over the
aerial railway. From the signal station the view
reminds one of a map of the world. It rather dazes
than delights the eye to roam so far, and imagination
itself grows weary at last and is glad to fold its
wings.
Manitou’s chief attraction lies
over the first range of hills-the veritable
Garden of the Gods. You may walk, ride or drive
to it; in any case the surprise begins the moment
you reach the ridge’s top above Manitou, and
ceases not till the back is turned at the close of
the excursion-nor then either, for the
memory of that marvel haunts one like a feverish dream.
Fancy a softly undulating land, delicately wooded
and decked with many an ornamental shrub; a landscape
that composes so well one can scarcely assure himself
that the artist or the landscape gardener has not
had a hand in the beautifying of it.
In this lonely, silent land, with
cloud shadows floating across it, at long intervals
bird voices or the bleating of distant flocks charm
the listening ear. Out of this wild and beautiful
spot spring Cyclopean rocks, appalling in the splendor
of their proportions and the magnificence of their
dyes. Sharp shafts shoot heavenward from breadths
of level sward, and glow like living flames; peaks
of various tinges overlook the tops of other
peaks, that, in their turn, lord it among gigantic
bowlders piled upon massive pedestals. It is Ossa
upon Pelion, in little; vastly impressive because
of the exceptional surroundings that magnify these
magnificent monuments, unique in their design and
almost unparalleled in their picturesque and daring
outline. Some of the monoliths tremble and sway,
or seem to sway; for they are balanced edgewise, as
if the gods had amused themselves in some infantile
game, and, growing weary of this little planet, had
fled and left their toys in confusion. The top-heavy
and the tottering ones are almost within reach; but
there are slabs of rock that look like slices out of
a mountain-I had almost said like slices
out of a red-hot volcano; they stand up against the
blue sky and the widespreading background in brilliant
and astonishing perspective.
I doubt if anywhere else in the world
the contrasts in color and form are more violent than
in the Garden of the Gods. They are not always
agreeable to the eye, for there is much crude color
here; but there are points of sight where these columns,
pinnacles, spires and obelisks, with base and capital,
are so grouped that the massing is as fantastical
as a cloud picture, and the whole can be compared only
to a petrified after-glow. I have seen pictures
of the Garden of the Gods that made me nearly burst
with laughter; I mean color studies that were supremely
ridiculous in my eyes, for I had not then seen the
original; but none of these makes me laugh any longer.
They serve, even the wildest and the worst of them,
to remind me of a morning drive, in the best of company,
through that grand garden where our combined vocabularies
of delight and wonderment were exhausted inside of
fifteen minutes; and where we drove on and on, hour
after hour, from climax to climax, lost in speechless
amazement.
Glen Eyrie is the valley of Rasselas-I
am sure it is. The Prince of Abyssinia left the
gate open when he, poor fool! went forth in search
of happiness and found it not. Now any one may
drive through the domain of the present possessor
and admire his wealth of pictorial solitude-without,
however, sharing it further. If it were mine,
would I permit thus much, I wonder? Only the
elect should enter there; and once the charmed circle
was complete, we would wall up the narrow passage
that leads to this terrestrial paradise, and you would
hear no more from us, or of us, nor we of you, or
from you, forever.
On my first visit to Colorado Springs
I made a little pilgrimage. I heard that a gentle
lady, whom I had always wished to see, was at her
home on the edge of the city. No trouble in finding
the place: any one could direct me. It was
a cosy cottage in the midst of a garden and shaded
by thickly leaved trees. Some one was bowed down
among the strawberry beds, busy there; yet the place
seemed half deserted and very, very quiet. Big
bamboo chairs and lounges lined the vine-curtained
porch. The shades in the low bay-window were half
drawn, and a glint of sunshine lighted the warm interior.
I saw heaps of precious books on the table in that
deep window. There was a mosquito door in the
porch, and there I knocked for admittance. I
knocked for a long time, but received no answer.
I knocked again so that I might be heard even in the
strawberry bed. A little kitten came up out of
the garden and said something kittenish to me, and
then I heard a muffled step within. The door
opened-the inner door,-and beyond
the wire-cloth screen, that remained closed against
me, I saw a figure like a ghost, but a very buxom
and wholesome ghost indeed.
I asked for the hostess. Alas!
she was far away and had been ill; it was not known
when she would return. Her address was offered
me, and I thought to write her,-thought
to tell her how I had sought out her home, hoping
to find her after years of patient waiting; and that
while I talked of her through the wire-cloth screen
the kitten, which she must have petted once upon a
time, climbed up the screen until it had reached the
face of the amiable woman within, and then purred and
purred as only a real kitten can. I never wrote
that letter; for while we were chatting on the porch
she of whom we chatted, she who has written a whole
armful of the most womanly and lovable of books, Helen
Hunt Jackson, lay dying in San Francisco and we knew
it not. But it is something to have stood by
her threshold, though she was never again to cross
it in the flesh, and to have been greeted by her kitten.
How she loved kittens! And now I can associate
her memory with the peacefulest of cottages, the easiest
of veranda chairs, a bay-window full of books and sunshine,
and a strawberry bed alive with berries and blossoms
and butterflies and bees. And yonder on the heights
her body was anon laid to rest among the haunts she
loved so dearly.