Cheyenne, Wyoming, September 8.
Precisely at 11 P.M. the huge Pacific
train, with its heavy bell tolling, thundered up to
the door of the Truckee House, and on presenting my
ticket at the double door of a “Silver Palace”
car, the slippered steward, whispering low, conducted
me to my berth a luxurious bed three and
a half feet wide, with a hair mattress on springs,
fine linen sheets, and costly California blankets.
The twenty-four inmates of the car were all invisible,
asleep behind rich curtains. It was a true Temple
of Morpheus. Profound sleep was the object to
which everything was dedicated. Four silver lamps
hanging from the roof, and burning low, gave a dreamy
light. On each side of the center passage, rich
rep curtains, green and crimson, striped with gold,
hung from silver bars running near the roof, and trailed
on the soft Axminster carpet. The temperature
was carefully kept at 70 degrees. It was 29
degrees outside. Silence and freedom from jolting
were secured by double doors and windows, costly and
ingenious arrangements of springs and cushions, and
a speed limited to eighteen miles an hour.
As I lay down, the gallop under the
dark pines, the frosty moon, the forest fires, the
flaring lights and roaring din of Truckee faded as
dreams fade, and eight hours later a pure, pink dawn
divulged a level blasted region, with grey sage brush
growing out of a soil encrusted with alkali, and bounded
on either side by low glaring ridges. All through
that day we traveled under a cloudless sky over solitary
glaring plains, and stopped twice at solitary, glaring
frame houses, where coarse, greasy meals, infested
by lazy flies, were provided at a dollar per head.
By evening we were running across the continent on
a bee line, and I sat for an hour on the rear platform
of the rear car to enjoy the wonderful beauty of the
sunset and the atmosphere. Far as one could
see in the crystalline air there was nothing but desert.
The jagged Humboldt ranges flaming in the sunset,
with snow in their clefts, though forty-five miles
off, looked within an easy canter. The bright
metal track, purpling like all else in the cool distance,
was all that linked one with Eastern or Western civilization.
The next morning, when the steward
unceremoniously turned us out of our berths soon after
sunrise, we were running down upon the Great Salt
Lake, bounded by the white Wahsatch ranges. Along
its shores, by means of irrigation, Mormon industry
has compelled the ground to yield fine crops of hay
and barley; and we passed several cabins, from which,
even at that early hour, Mormons, each with two or
three wives, were going forth to their day’s
work. The women were ugly, and their shapeless
blue dresses hideous. At the Mormon town of Ogden
we changed cars, and again traversed dusty plains,
white and glaring, varied by muddy streams and rough,
arid valleys, now and then narrowing into canyons.
By common consent the windows were kept closed to exclude
the fine white alkaline dust, which is very irritating
to the nostrils. The journey became more and
more wearisome as we ascended rapidly over immense
plains and wastes of gravel destitute of mountain boundaries,
and with only here and there a “knob” or
“butte” to break the monotony.
The wheel-marks of the trail to Utah often ran parallel
with the track, and bones of oxen were bleaching in
the sun, the remains of those “whose carcasses
fell in the wilderness” on the long and drouthy
journey. The daybreak of to-day (Sunday) found
us shivering at Fort Laramie, a frontier post dismally
situated at a height of 7,000 feet. Another 1,000
feet over gravelly levels brought us to Sherman, the
highest level reached by this railroad. From
this point eastward the streams fall into the Atlantic.
The ascent of these apparently level plateaus is
called “crossing the Rocky Mountains,”
but I have seen nothing of the range, except two peaks
like teeth lying low on the distant horizon.
It became mercilessly cold; some people thought it
snowed, but I only saw rolling billows of fog.
Lads passed through the cars the whole morning, selling
newspapers, novels, cacti, lollypops, pop corn, pea
nuts, and ivory ornaments, so that, having lost all
reckoning of the days, I never knew that it was Sunday
till the cars pulled up at the door of the hotel in
this detestable place.
The surrounding plains were endless
and verdureless. The scanty grasses were long
ago turned into sun-cured hay by the fierce summer
heats. There is neither tree nor bush, the sky
is grey, the earth buff, the air blae and windy, and
clouds of coarse granitic dust sweep across the prairie
and smother the settlement. Cheyenne is described
as “a God-forsaken, God-forgotten place.”
That it forgets God is written on its face.
It owes its existence to the railroad, and has diminished
in population, but is a depot for a large amount of
the necessaries of life which are distributed through
the scantily settled districts within distances of
300 miles by “freight wagons,” each drawn
by four or six horses or mules, or double that number
of oxen. At times over 100 wagons, with double
that number of teamsters, are in Cheyenne at once.
A short time ago it was a perfect pandemonium, mainly
inhabited by rowdies and desperadoes, the scum of advancing
civilization; and murders, stabbings, shooting, and
pistol affrays were at times events of almost hourly
occurrence in its drinking dens. But in the
West, when things reach their worst, a sharp and sure
remedy is provided. Those settlers who find
the state of matters intolerable, organize themselves
into a Vigilance Committee. “Judge Lynch,”
with a few feet of rope, appears on the scene, the
majority crystallizes round the supporters of order,
warnings are issued to obnoxious people, simply bearing
a scrawl of a tree with a man dangling from it, with
such words as “Clear out of this by 6 A.M., or .”
A number of the worst desperadoes are tried by a
yet more summary process than a drumhead court martial,
“strung up,” and buried ignominiously.
I have been told that 120 ruffians were disposed
of in this way here in a single fortnight. Cheyenne
is now as safe as Hilo, and the interval between the
most desperate lawlessness and the time when United
States law, with its corruption and feebleness, comes
upon the scene is one of comparative security and
good order. Piety is not the forte of Cheyenne.
The roads resound with atrocious profanity, and the
rowdyism of the saloons and bar-rooms is repressed,
not extirpated.
The population, once 6,000, is now
about 4,000. It is an ill-arranged set of frame
houses and shanties and rubbish heaps, and offal
of deer and antelope, produce the foulest smells I
have smelt for a long time. Some of the houses
are painted a blinding white; others are unpainted;
there is not a bush, or garden, or green thing; it
just straggles out promiscuously on the boundless
brown plains, on the extreme verge of which three
toothy peaks are seen. It is utterly slovenly-looking,
and unornamental, abounds in slouching bar-room-looking
characters, and looks a place of low, mean lives.
Below the hotel window freight cars are being perpetually
shunted, but beyond the railroad tracks are nothing
but the brown plains, with their lonely sights now
a solitary horseman at a traveling amble, then a party
of Indians in paint and feathers, but civilized up
to the point of carrying firearms, mounted on sorry
ponies, the bundled-up squaws riding astride
on the baggage ponies; then a drove of ridgy-spined,
long-horned cattle, which have been several months
eating their way from Texas, with their escort of
four or five much-spurred horsemen, in peaked hats,
blue-hooded coats, and high boots, heavily armed with
revolvers and repeating rifles, and riding small wiry
horses. A solitary wagon, with a white tilt,
drawn by eight oxen, is probably bearing an emigrant
and his fortunes to Colorado. On one of the dreary
spaces of the settlement six white-tilted wagons, each
with twelve oxen, are standing on their way to a distant
part. Everything suggests a beyond.
September 9.
I have found at the post office here
a circular letter of recommendation from ex-Governor
Hunt, procured by Miss Kingsley’s kindness,
and another equally valuable one of “authentication”
and recommendation from Mr. Bowles, of the Springfield
Republican, whose name is a household word in all
the West. Armed with these, I shall plunge boldly
into Colorado. I am suffering from giddiness
and nausea produced by the bad smells. A “help”
here says that there have been fifty-six deaths from
cholera during the last twenty days. Is common
humanity lacking, I wonder, in this region of hard
greed? Can it not be bought by dollars here,
like every other commodity, votes included? Last
night I made the acquaintance of a shadowy gentleman
from Wisconsin, far gone in consumption, with a spirited
wife and young baby. He had been ordered to
the Plains as a last resource, but was much worse.
Early this morning he crawled to my door, scarcely
able to speak from debility and bleeding from the
lungs, begging me to go to his wife, who, the doctor
said was ill of cholera. The child had been
ill all night, and not for love or money could he get
any one to do anything for them, not even to go for
the medicine. The lady was blue, and in great
pain from cramp, and the poor unweaned infant was roaring
for the nourishment which had failed. I vainly
tried to get hot water and mustard for a poultice,
and though I offered a Negro a dollar to go for the
medicine, he looked at it superciliously, hummed a
tune, and said he must wait for the Pacific train,
which was not due for an hour. Equally in vain
I hunted through Cheyenne for a feeding bottle.
Not a maternal heart softened to the helpless mother
and starving child, and my last resource was to dip
a piece of sponge in some milk and water, and try
to pacify the creature. I applied Rigollot’s
leaves, went for the medicine, saw the popular host a
bachelor who mentioned a girl who, after
much difficulty, consented to take charge of the baby
for two dollars a day and attend to the mother, and
having remained till she began to amend, I took the
cars for Greeley, a settlement on the Plains, which
I had been recommended to make my starting point for
the mountains.
Fort Collins, September 10.
It gave me a strange sensation to
embark upon the Plains. Plains, plains everywhere,
plains generally level, but elsewhere rolling in long
undulations, like the waves of a sea which had fallen
asleep. They are covered thinly with buff grass,
the withered stalks of flowers, Spanish bayonet, and
a small beehive-shaped cactus. One could gallop
all over them.
They are peopled with large villages
of what are called prairie dogs, because they utter
a short, sharp bark, but the dogs are, in reality,
marmots. We passed numbers of villages,
which are composed of raised circular orifices, about
eighteen inches in diameter, with sloping passages
leading downwards for five or six feet. Hundreds
of these burrows are placed together. On nearly
every rim a small furry reddish-buff beast sat on
his hind legs, looking, so far as head went, much
like a young seal. These creatures were acting
as sentinels, and sunning themselves. As we
passed, each gave a warning yelp, shook its tail,
and, with a ludicrous flourish of its hind legs, dived
into its hole. The appearance of hundreds of
these creatures, each eighteen inches long, sitting
like dogs begging, with their paws down and all turned
sunwards, is most grotesque. The Wish-ton-Wish
has few enemies, and is a most prolific animal.
From its enormous increase and the energy and extent
of its burrowing operations, one can fancy that in
the course of years the prairies will be seriously
injured, as it honeycombs the ground, and renders
it unsafe for horses. The burrows seem usually
to be shared by owls, and many of the people insist
that a rattlesnake is also an inmate, but I hope for
the sake of the harmless, cheery little prairie dog,
that this unwelcome fellowship is a myth.
After running on a down grade for
some time, five distinct ranges of mountains, one
above another, a lurid blue against a lurid sky, upheaved
themselves above the prairie sea. An American
railway car, hot, stuffy and full of chewing, spitting
Yankees, was not an ideal way of approaching this
range which had early impressed itself upon my imagination.
Still, it was truly grand, although it was sixty miles
off, and we were looking at it from a platform 5,000
feet in height. As I write I am only twenty-five
miles from them, and they are gradually gaining possession
of me.
I can look at and feel nothing
else. At five in the afternoon frame houses
and green fields began to appear, the cars drew up,
and two of my fellow passengers and I got out and
carried our own luggage through the deep dust to a
small, rough, Western tavern, where with difficulty
we were put up for the night. This settlement
is called the Greeley Temperance Colony, and was founded
lately by an industrious class of emigrants from the
East, all total abstainers, and holding advanced political
opinions. They bought and fenced 50,000 acres
of land, constructed an irrigating canal, which distributes
its waters on reasonable terms, have already a population
of 3,000, and are the most prosperous and rising colony
in Colorado, being altogether free from either laziness
or crime. Their rich fields are artificially
productive solely; and after seeing regions where Nature
gives spontaneously, one is amazed that people should
settle here to be dependent on irrigating canals,
with the risk of having their crops destroyed by grasshoppers.
A clause in the charter of the colony prohibits the
introduction, sale, or consumption of intoxicating
liquor, and I hear that the men of Greeley carry their
crusade against drink even beyond their limits, and
have lately sacked three houses open for the sale
of drink near their frontier, pouring the whisky upon
the ground, so that people don’t now like to
run the risk of bringing liquor near Greeley, and
the temperance influence is spreading over a very
large area. As the men have no bar-rooms to sit
in, I observed that Greeley was asleep at an hour
when other places were beginning their revelries.
Nature is niggardly, and living is coarse and rough,
the merest necessaries of hardy life being all that
can be thought of in this stage of existence.
My first experiences of Colorado travel
have been rather severe. At Greeley I got a
small upstairs room at first, but gave it up to a
married couple with a child, and then had one downstairs
no bigger than a cabin, with only a canvas partition.
It was very hot, and every place was thick with black
flies. The English landlady had just lost her
“help,” and was in a great fuss, so that
I helped her to get supper ready. Its chief
features were greasiness and black flies. Twenty
men in working clothes fed and went out again, “nobody
speaking to nobody.” The landlady introduced
me to a Vermont settler who lives in the “Foot
Hills,” who was very kind and took a great deal
of trouble to get me a horse. Horses abound,
but they are either large American horses, which are
only used for draught, or small, active horses, called
broncos, said to be from a Spanish word, signifying
that they can never be broke. They nearly all
“buck,” and are described as being more
“ugly” and treacherous than mules.
There is only one horse in Greeley “safe for
a woman to ride.” I tried an Indian pony
by moonlight such a moonlight but
found he had tender feet. The kitchen was the
only sitting room, so I shortly went to bed, to be
awoke very soon by crawling creatures apparently in
myriads. I struck a light, and found such swarms
of bugs that I gathered myself up on the wooden chairs,
and dozed uneasily till sunrise. Bugs are a
great pest in Colorado. They come out of the
earth, infest the wooden walls, and cannot be got rid
of by any amount of cleanliness. Many careful
housewives take their beds to pieces every week and
put carbolic acid on them.
It was a glorious, cool morning, and
the great range of the Rocky Mountains looked magnificent.
I tried the pony again, but found he would not do
for a long journey; and as my Vermont acquaintance
offered me a seat in his wagon to Fort Collins, twenty-five
miles nearer the Mountains, I threw a few things together
and came here with him. We left Greeley at 10,
and arrived here at 4:30, staying an hour for food
on the way. I liked the first half of the drive;
but the fierce, ungoverned, blazing heat of the sun
on the whitish earth for the last half, was terrible
even with my white umbrella, which I have not used
since I left New Zealand; it was sickening. Then
the eyes have never anything green to rest upon, except
in the river bottoms, where there is green hay grass.
We followed mostly the course of the River Cache-a-la-Poudre,
which rises in the Mountains, and after supplying
Greeley with irrigation, falls into the Platte, which
is an affluent of the Missouri. When once beyond
the scattered houses and great ring fence of the vigorous
Greeley colonists, we were on the boundless prairie.
Now and then horsemen passed us, and we met three
wagons with white tilts. Except where the prairie
dogs have honeycombed the ground, you can drive almost
anywhere, and the passage of a few wagons over the
same track makes a road. We forded the river,
whose course is marked the whole way by a fringe of
small cotton-woods and aspens, and traveled hour after
hour with nothing to see except some dog towns, with
their quaint little sentinels; but the view in front
was glorious. The Alps, from the Lombard Plains,
are the finest mountain panorama I ever saw, but not
equal to this; for not only do five high-peaked giants,
each nearly the height of Mont Blanc, lift their dazzling
summits above the lower ranges, but the expanse of
mountains is so vast, and the whole lie in a transparent
medium of the richest blue, not haze something
peculiar to the region. The lack of foreground
is a great artistic fault, and the absence of greenery
is melancholy, and makes me recall sadly the entrancing
detail of the Hawaiian Islands. Once only, the
second time we forded the river, the cotton-woods formed
a foreground, and then the loveliness was heavenly.
We stopped at a log house and got a rough dinner
of beef and potatoes, and I was amused at the five
men who shared it with us for apologizing to me for
being without their coats, as if coats would not be
an enormity on the Plains.
It is the election day for the Territory,
and men were galloping over the prairie to register
their votes. The three in the wagon talked politics
the whole time. They spoke openly and shamelessly
of the prices given for votes; and apparently there
was not a politician on either side who was not accused
of degrading corruption. We saw a convoy of
5,000 head of Texas cattle traveling from southern
Texas to Iowa. They had been nine months on
the way! They were under the charge of twenty
mounted vacheros, heavily armed, and a light wagon
accompanied them, full of extra rifles and ammunition,
not unnecessary, for the Indians are raiding in all
directions, maddened by the reckless and useless slaughter
of the buffalo, which is their chief subsistence.
On the Plains are herds of wild horses, buffalo, deer,
and antelope; and in the Mountains, bears, wolves,
deer, elk, mountain lions, bison, and mountain sheep.
You see a rifle in every wagon, as people always
hope to fall in with game.
By the time we reached Fort Collins
I was sick and dizzy with the heat of the sun, and
not disposed to be pleased with a most unpleasing
place. It was a military post, but at present
consists of a few frame houses put down recently on
the bare and burning plain. The settlers have
“great expectations,” but of what?
The Mountains look hardly nearer than from Greeley;
one only realizes their vicinity by the loss of their
higher peaks. This house is freer from bugs than
the one at Greeley, but full of flies. These
new settlements are altogether revolting, entirely
utilitarian, given up to talk of dollars as well as
to making them, with coarse speech, coarse food, coarse
everything, nothing wherewith to satisfy the higher
cravings if they exist, nothing on which the eye can
rest with pleasure. The lower floor of this inn
swarms with locusts in addition to thousands of black
flies. The latter cover the ground and rise
buzzing from it as you walk.
I.
L. B.