Estes park, Colorado, October.
As this account of the ascent of Long’s
Peak could not be written at the time, I am much disinclined
to write it, especially as no sort of description
within my powers could enable another to realize the
glorious sublimity, the majestic solitude, and the
unspeakable awfulness and fascination of the scenes
in which I spent Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday.
Long’s Peak, 14,700 feet high,
blocks up one end of Estes Park, and dwarfs all the
surrounding mountains. From it on this side rise,
snow-born, the bright St. Vrain, and the Big and Little
Thompson. By sunlight or moonlight its splintered
grey crest is the one object which, in spite of wapiti
and bighorn, skunk and grizzly, unfailingly arrests
the eyes. From it come all storms of snow and
wind, and the forked lightnings play round its head
like a glory. It is one of the noblest of mountains,
but in one’s imagination it grows to be much
more than a mountain. It becomes invested with
a personality. In its caverns and abysses one
comes to fancy that it generates and chains the strong
winds, to let them loose in its fury. The thunder
becomes its voice, and the lightnings do it homage.
Other summits blush under the morning kiss of the
sun, and turn pale the next moment; but it detains
the first sunlight and holds it round its head for
an hour at least, till it pleases to change from rosy
red to deep blue; and the sunset, as if spell-bound,
lingers latest on its crest. The soft winds which
hardly rustle the pine needles down here are raging
rudely up there round its motionless summit.
The mark of fire is upon it; and though it has passed
into a grim repose, it tells of fire and upheaval as
truly, though not as eloquently, as the living volcanoes
of Hawaii. Here under its shadow one learns how
naturally nature worship, and the propitiation of
the forces of nature, arose in minds which had no
better light.
Long’s Peak, “the American
Matterhorn,” as some call it, was ascended five
years ago for the first time. I thought I should
like to attempt it, but up to Monday, when Evans left
for Denver, cold water was thrown upon the project.
It was too late in the season, the winds were likely
to be strong, etc.; but just before leaving, Evans
said that the weather was looking more settled, and
if I did not get farther than the timber line it would
be worth going. Soon after he left, “Mountain
Jim” came in, and said he would go up as guide,
and the two youths who rode here with me from Longmount
and I caught at the proposal. Mrs. Edwards at
once baked bread for three days, steaks were cut from
the steer which hangs up conveniently, and tea, sugar,
and butter were benevolently added. Our picnic
was not to be a luxurious or “well-found”
one, for, in order to avoid the expense of a pack mule,
we limited our luggage to what our saddle horses could
carry. Behind my saddle I carried three pair
of camping blankets and a quilt, which reached to
my shoulders. My own boots were so much worn
that it was painful to walk, even about the park,
in them, so Evans had lent me a pair of his hunting
boots, which hung to the horn of my saddle. The
horses of the two young men were equally loaded, for
we had to prepare for many degrees of frost.
“Jim” was a shocking figure; he had on
an old pair of high boots, with a baggy pair of old
trousers made of deer hide, held on by an old scarf
tucked into them; a leather shirt, with three or four
ragged unbuttoned waistcoats over it; an old smashed
wideawake, from under which his tawny, neglected ringlets
hung; and with his one eye, his one long spur, his
knife in his belt, his revolver in his waistcoat pocket,
his saddle covered with an old beaver skin, from which
the paws hung down; his camping blankets behind him,
his rifle laid across the saddle in front of him, and
his axe, canteen, and other gear hanging to the horn,
he was as awful-looking a ruffian as one could see.
By way of contrast he rode a small Arab mare, of
exquisite beauty, skittish, high spirited, gentle,
but altogether too light for him, and he fretted her
incessantly to make her display herself.
Heavily loaded as all our horses were,
“Jim” started over the half-mile of level
grass at a hard gallop, and then throwing his mare
on her haunches, pulled up alongside of me, and with
a grace of manner which soon made me forget his appearance,
entered into a conversation which lasted for more
than three hours, in spite of the manifold checks of
fording streams, single file, abrupt ascents and descents,
and other incidents of mountain travel. The
ride was one series of glories and surprises, of “park”
and glade, of lake and stream, of mountains on mountains,
culminating in the rent pinnacles of Long’s Peak,
which looked yet grander and ghastlier as we crossed
an attendant mountain 11,000 feet high. The
slanting sun added fresh beauty every hour. There
were dark pines against a lemon sky, grey peaks reddening
and etherealizing, gorges of deep and infinite blue,
floods of golden glory pouring through canyons of
enormous depth, an atmosphere of absolute purity,
an occasional foreground of cottonwood and aspen flaunting
in red and gold to intensify the blue gloom of the
pines, the trickle and murmur of streams fringed with
icicles, the strange sough of gusts moving among the
pine tops sights and sounds not of the lower
earth, but of the solitary, beast-haunted, frozen
upper altitudes. From the dry, buff grass of
Estes Park we turned off up a trail on the side of
a pine-hung gorge, up a steep pine-clothed hill, down
to a small valley, rich in fine, sun-cured hay about
eighteen inches high, and enclosed by high mountains
whose deepest hollow contains a lily-covered lake,
fitly named “The Lake of the Lilies.”
Ah, how magical its beauty was, as it slept in silence,
while there the dark pines were mirrored motionless
in its pale gold, and here the great white lily
cups and dark green leaves rested on amethyst-colored
water!
From this we ascended into the purple
gloom of great pine forests which clothe the skirts
of the mountains up to a height of about 11,000 feet,
and from their chill and solitary depths we had glimpses
of golden atmosphere and rose-lit summits, not of
“the land very far off,” but of the land
nearer now in all its grandeur, gaining in sublimity
by nearness glimpses, too, through a broken
vista of purple gorges, of the illimitable Plains
lying idealized in the late sunlight, their baked,
brown expanse transfigured into the likeness of a sunset
sea rolling infinitely in waves of misty gold.
We rode upwards through the gloom
on a steep trail blazed through the forest, all my
intellect concentrated on avoiding being dragged off
my horse by impending branches, or having the blankets
badly torn, as those of my companions were, by sharp
dead limbs, between which there was hardly room to
pass the horses breathless, and requiring
to stop every few yards, though their riders, except
myself, were afoot. The gloom of the dense,
ancient, silent forest is to me awe inspiring.
On such an evening it is soundless, except for the
branches creaking in the soft wind, the frequent snap
of decayed timber, and a murmur in the pine tops as
of a not distant waterfall, all tending to produce
eeriness and a sadness “hardly akin to pain.”
There no lumberer’s axe has ever rung.
The trees die when they have attained their prime,
and stand there, dead and bare, till the fierce mountain
winds lay them prostrate. The pines grew smaller
and more sparse as we ascended, and the last stragglers
wore a tortured, warring look. The timber line
was passed, but yet a little higher a slope of mountain
meadow dipped to the south-west towards a bright stream
trickling under ice and icicles, and there a grove
of the beautiful silver spruce marked our camping
ground. The trees were in miniature, but so exquisitely
arranged that one might well ask what artist’s
hand had planted them, scattering them here, clumping
them there, and training their slim spires towards
heaven. Hereafter, when I call up memories of
the glorious, the view from this camping ground will
come up. Looking east, gorges opened to the
distant Plains, then fading into purple grey.
Mountains with pine-clothed skirts rose in ranges,
or, solitary, uplifted their grey summits, while close
behind, but nearly 3,000 feet above us, towered the
bald white crest of Long’s Peak, its huge precipices
red with the light of a sun long lost to our eyes.
Close to us, in the caverned side of the Peak, was
snow that, owing to its position, is eternal.
Soon the afterglow came on, and before it faded a big
half-moon hung out of the heavens, shining through
the silver blue foliage of the pines on the frigid
background of snow, and turning the whole into fairyland.
The “photo” which accompanies this letter
is by a courageous Denver artist who attempted the
ascent just before I arrived, but, after camping out
at the timber line for a week, was foiled by the perpetual
storms, and was driven down again, leaving some very
valuable apparatus about 3,000 feet from the summit.
Unsaddling and picketing the horses
securely, making the beds of pine shoots, and dragging
up logs for fuel, warmed us all. “Jim”
built up a great fire, and before long we were all
sitting around it at supper. It didn’t
matter much that we had to drink our tea out of the
battered meat tins in which it was boiled, and eat
strips of beef reeking with pine smoke without plates
or forks.
“Treat Jim as a gentleman and
you’ll find him one,” I had been told;
and though his manner was certainly bolder and freer
than that of gentlemen generally, no imaginary fault
could be found. He was very agreeable as a man
of culture as well as a child of nature; the desperado
was altogether out of sight. He was very courteous
and even kind to me, which was fortunate, as the young
men had little idea of showing even ordinary civilities.
That night I made the acquaintance of his dog “Ring,”
said to be the best hunting dog in Colorado, with
the body and legs of a collie, but a head approaching
that of a mastiff, a noble face with a wistful human
expression, and the most truthful eyes I ever saw
in an animal. His master loves him if he loves
anything, but in his savage moods ill-treats him.
“Ring’s” devotion never swerves,
and his truthful eyes are rarely taken off his master’s
face. He is almost human in his intelligence,
and, unless he is told to do so, he never takes notice
of any one but “Jim.” In a tone
as if speaking to a human being, his master, pointing
to me, said, “Ring, go to that lady, and don’t
leave her again to-night.” “Ring”
at once came to me, looked into my face, laid his
head on my shoulder, and then lay down beside me with
his head on my lap, but never taking his eyes from
“Jim’s” face.
The long shadows of the pines lay
upon the frosted grass, an aurora leaped fitfully,
and the moonlight, though intensely bright, was pale
beside the red, leaping flames of our pine logs and
their red glow on our gear, ourselves, and Ring’s
truthful face. One of the young men sang a Latin
student’s song and two Negro melodies; the other
“Sweet Spirit, hear my Prayer.”
“Jim” sang one of Moore’s melodies
in a singular falsetto, and all together sang, “The
Star-spangled Banner” and “The Red, White,
and Blue.” Then “Jim” recited
a very clever poem of his own composition, and told
some fearful Indian stories. A group of small
silver spruces away from the fire was my sleeping place.
The artist who had been up there had so woven and
interlaced their lower branches as to form a bower,
affording at once shelter from the wind and a most
agreeable privacy. It was thickly strewn with
young pine shoots, and these, when covered with a
blanket, with an inverted saddle for a pillow, made
a luxurious bed. The mercury at 9 P.M. was 12
degrees below the freezing point. “Jim,”
after a last look at the horses, made a huge fire,
and stretched himself out beside it, but “Ring”
lay at my back to keep me warm. I could not sleep,
but the night passed rapidly. I was anxious
about the ascent, for gusts of ominous sound swept
through the pines at intervals. Then wild animals
howled, and “Ring” was perturbed in spirit
about them. Then it was strange to see the notorious
desperado, a red-handed man, sleeping as quietly as
innocence sleeps. But, above all, it was exciting
to lie there, with no better shelter than a bower
of pines, on a mountain 11,000 feet high, in the very
heart of the Rocky Range, under twelve degrees of
frost, hearing sounds of wolves, with shivering stars
looking through the fragrant canopy, with arrowy pines
for bed-posts, and for a night lamp the red flames
of a camp-fire.
Day dawned long before the sun rose,
pure and lemon colored. The rest were looking
after the horses, when one of the students came running
to tell me that I must come farther down the slope,
for “Jim” said he had never seen such
a sunrise. From the chill, grey Peak above, from
the everlasting snows, from the silvered pines, down
through mountain ranges with their depths of Tyrian
purple, we looked to where the Plains lay cold, in
blue-grey, like a morning sea against a far horizon.
Suddenly, as a dazzling streak at first, but enlarging
rapidly into a dazzling sphere, the sun wheeled above
the grey line, a light and glory as when it was first
created. “Jim” involuntarily and
reverently uncovered his head, and exclaimed, “I
believe there is a God!” I felt as if, Parsee-like,
I must worship. The grey of the Plains changed
to purple, the sky was all one rose-red flush, on which
vermilion cloud-streaks rested; the ghastly peaks gleamed
like rubies, the earth and heavens were new created.
Surely “the Most High dwelleth not in temples
made with hands!” For a full hour those Plains
simulated the ocean, down to whose limitless expanse
of purple, cliff, rocks, and promontories swept down.
By seven we had finished breakfast,
and passed into the ghastlier solitudes above, I riding
as far as what, rightly, or wrongly, are called the
“Lava Beds,” an expanse of large and small
boulders, with snow in their crevices. It was
very cold; some water which we crossed was frozen
hard enough to bear the horse. “Jim”
had advised me against taking any wraps, and my thin
Hawaiian riding dress, only fit for the tropics, was
penetrated by the keen air The rarefied atmosphere
soon began to oppress our breathing, and I found that
Evans’s boots were so large that I had no foothold.
Fortunately, before the real difficulty of the ascent
began, we found, under a rock, a pair of small overshoes,
probably left by the Hayden exploring expedition, which
just lasted for the day. As we were leaping
from rock to rock, “Jim” said, “I
was thinking in the night about your traveling alone,
and wondering where you carried your Derringer, for
I could see no signs of it.” On my telling
him that I traveled unarmed, he could hardly believe
it, and adjured me to get a revolver at once.
On arriving at the “Notch”
(a literal gate of rock), we found ourselves absolutely
on the knifelike ridge or backbone of Long’s
Peak, only a few feet wide, covered with colossal
boulders and fragments, and on the other side shelving
in one precipitous, snow-patched sweep of 3,000 feet
to a picturesque hollow, containing a lake of pure
green water. Other lakes, hidden among dense
pine woods, were farther off, while close above us
rose the Peak, which, for about 500 feet, is a smooth,
gaunt, inaccessible-looking pile of granite.
Passing through the “Notch,” we looked
along the nearly inaccessible side of the Peak, composed
of boulders and debris of all shapes and sizes, through
which appeared broad, smooth ribs of reddish-colored
granite, looking as if they upheld the towering rock
mass above. I usually dislike bird’s-eye
and panoramic views, but, though from a mountain, this
was not one. Serrated ridges, not much lower
than that on which we stood, rose, one beyond another,
far as that pure atmosphere could carry the vision,
broken into awful chasms deep with ice and snow, rising
into pinnacles piercing the heavenly blue with their
cold, barren grey, on, on for ever, till the most
distant range upbore unsullied snow alone. There
were fair lakes mirroring the dark pine woods, canyons
dark and blue-black with unbroken expanses of pines,
snow-slashed pinnacles, wintry heights frowning upon
lovely parks, watered and wooded, lying in the lap
of summer; North Park floating off into the blue distance,
Middle Park closed till another season, the sunny slopes
of Estes Park, and winding down among the mountains
the snowy ridge of the Divide, whose bright waters
seek both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. There,
far below, links of diamonds showed where the Grand
River takes its rise to seek the mysterious Colorado,
with its still unsolved enigma, and lose itself in
the waters of the Pacific; and nearer the snow-born
Thompson bursts forth from the ice to begin its journey
to the Gulf of Mexico. Nature, rioting in her
grandest mood, exclaimed with voices of grandeur,
solitude, sublimity, beauty, and infinity, “Lord,
what is man, that Thou art mindful of him? or the
son of man, that Thou visitest him?” Never-to-be-forgotten
glories they were, burnt in upon my memory by six
succeeding hours of terror.
You know I have no head and no ankles,
and never ought to dream of mountaineering; and had
I known that the ascent was a real mountaineering
feat I should not have felt the slightest ambition
to perform it. As it is, I am only humiliated
by my success, for “Jim” dragged me up,
like a bale of goods, by sheer force of muscle.
At the “Notch” the real business of the
ascent began. Two thousand feet of solid rock
towered above us, four thousand feet of broken rock
shelved precipitously below; smooth granite ribs,
with barely foothold, stood out here and there; melted
snow refrozen several times, presented a more serious
obstacle; many of the rocks were loose, and tumbled
down when touched. To me it was a time of extreme
terror. I was roped to “Jim,” but
it was of no use; my feet were paralyzed and slipped
on the bare rock, and he said it was useless to try
to go that way, and we retraced our steps. I
wanted to return to the “Notch,” knowing
that my incompetence would detain the party, and one
of the young men said almost plainly that a woman
was a dangerous encumbrance, but the trapper replied
shortly that if it were not to take a lady up he would
not go up at all. He went on to explore, and
reported that further progress on the correct line
of ascent was blocked by ice; and then for two hours
we descended, lowering ourselves by our hands from
rock to rock along a boulder-strewn sweep of 4,000
feet, patched with ice and snow, and perilous from
rolling stones. My fatigue, giddiness, and pain
from bruised ankles, and arms half pulled out of their
sockets, were so great that I should never have gone
halfway had not “Jim,” nolens volens,
dragged me along with a patience and skill, and withal
a determination that I should ascend the Peak, which
never failed. After descending about 2,000 feet
to avoid the ice, we got into a deep ravine with inaccessible
sides, partly filled with ice and snow and partly
with large and small fragments of rock, which were
constantly giving away, rendering the footing very
insecure. That part to me was two hours of painful
and unwilling submission to the inevitable; of trembling,
slipping, straining, of smooth ice appearing when it
was least expected, and of weak entreaties to be left
behind while the others went on. “Jim”
always said that there was no danger, that there was
only a short bad bit ahead, and that I should go up
even if he carried me!
Slipping, faltering, gasping from
the exhausting toil in the rarefied air, with throbbing
hearts and panting lungs, we reached the top of the
gorge and squeezed ourselves between two gigantic fragments
of rock by a passage called the “Dog’s
Lift,” when I climbed on the shoulders of one
man and then was hauled up. This introduced us
by an abrupt turn round the south-west angle of the
Peak to a narrow shelf of considerable length, rugged,
uneven, and so overhung by the cliff in some places
that it is necessary to crouch to pass at all.
Above, the Peak looks nearly vertical for 400 feet;
and below, the most tremendous precipice I have ever
seen descends in one unbroken fall. This is
usually considered the most dangerous part of the ascent,
but it does not seem so to me, for such foothold as
there is is secure, and one fancies that it is possible
to hold on with the hands. But there, and on
the final, and, to my thinking, the worst part of the
climb, one slip, and a breathing, thinking, human
being would lie 3,000 feet below, a shapeless, bloody
heap! “Ring” refused to traverse
the Ledge, and remained at the “Lift”
howling piteously.
From thence the view is more magnificent
even than that from the “Notch.”
At the foot of the precipice below us lay a lovely
lake, wood embosomed, from or near which the bright
St. Vrain and other streams take their rise.
I thought how their clear cold waters, growing turbid
in the affluent flats, would heat under the tropic
sun, and eventually form part of that great ocean
river which renders our far-off islands habitable
by impinging on their shores. Snowy ranges, one
behind the other, extended to the distant horizon,
folding in their wintry embrace the beauties of Middle
Park. Pike’s Peak, more than one hundred
miles off, lifted that vast but shapeless summit which
is the landmark of southern Colorado. There
were snow patches, snow slashes, snow abysses, snow
forlorn and soiled looking, snow pure and dazzling,
snow glistening above the purple robe of pine worn
by all the mountains; while away to the east, in limitless
breadth, stretched the green-grey of the endless Plains.
Giants everywhere reared their splintered crests.
From thence, with a single sweep, the eye takes in
a distance of 300 miles that distance to
the west, north, and south being made up of mountains
ten, eleven, twelve, and thirteen thousand feet in
height, dominated by Long’s Peak, Gray’s
Peak, and Pike’s Peak, all nearly the height
of Mont Blanc! On the Plains we traced the rivers
by their fringe of cottonwoods to the distant Platte,
and between us and them lay glories of mountain, canyon,
and lake, sleeping in depths of blue and purple most
ravishing to the eye.
As we crept from the ledge round a
horn of rock I beheld what made me perfectly sick
and dizzy to look at the terminal Peak itself a
smooth, cracked face or wall of pink granite, as nearly
perpendicular as anything could well be up which it
was possible to climb, well deserving the name of
the “American Matterhorn.”
Scaling, not climbing, is the
correct term for this last ascent. It took one
hour to accomplish 500 feet, pausing for breath every
minute or two. The only foothold was in narrow
cracks or on minute projections on the granite.
To get a toe in these cracks, or here and there on
a scarcely obvious projection, while crawling on hands
and knees, all the while tortured with thirst and
gasping and struggling for breath, this was the climb;
but at last the Peak was won. A grand, well-defined
mountain top it is, a nearly level acre of boulders,
with precipitous sides all round, the one we came
up being the only accessible one.
It was not possible to remain long.
One of the young men was seriously alarmed by bleeding
from the lungs, and the intense dryness of the day
and the rarefication of the air, at a height of nearly
15,000 feet, made respiration very painful.
There is always water on the Peak, but it was frozen
as hard as a rock, and the sucking of ice and snow
increases thirst. We all suffered severely from
the want of water, and the gasping for breath made
our mouths and tongues so dry that articulation was
difficult, and the speech of all unnatural.
From the summit were seen in unrivalled
combination all the views which had rejoiced our eyes
during the ascent. It was something at last to
stand upon the storm-rent crown of this lonely sentinel
of the Rocky Range, on one of the mightiest of the
vertebrae of the backbone of the North American continent,
and to see the waters start for both oceans.
Uplifted above love and hate and storms of passion,
calm amidst the eternal silences, fanned by zéphyrs
and bathed in living blue, peace rested for that one
bright day on the Peak, as if it were some region
Where falls not rain, or hail, or any
snow,
Or ever wind blows loudly.
We placed our names, with the date
of ascent, in a tin within a crevice, and descended
to the Ledge, sitting on the smooth granite, getting
our feet into cracks and against projections, and letting
ourselves down by our hands, “Jim” going
before me, so that I might steady my feet against
his powerful shoulders. I was no longer giddy,
and faced the precipice of 3,500 feet without a shiver.
Repassing the Ledge and Lift, we accomplished the
descent through 1,500 feet of ice and snow, with many
falls and bruises, but no worse mishap, and there
separated, the young men taking the steepest but most
direct way to the “Notch,” with the intention
of getting ready for the march home, and “Jim”
and I taking what he thought the safer route for me a
descent over boulders for 2,000 feet, and then a tremendous
ascent to the “Notch.” I had various
falls, and once hung by my frock, which caught on
a rock, and “Jim” severed it with his hunting
knife, upon which I fell into a crevice full of soft
snow. We were driven lower down the mountains
than he had intended by impassable tracts of ice, and
the ascent was tremendous. For the last 200
feet the boulders were of enormous size, and the steepness
fearful. Sometimes I drew myself up on hands
and knees, sometimes crawled; sometimes “Jim”
pulled me up by my arms or a lariat, and sometimes
I stood on his shoulders, or he made steps for me
of his feet and hands, but at six we stood on the “Notch”
in the splendor of the sinking sun, all color deepening,
all peaks glorifying, all shadows purpling, all peril
past.
“Jim” had parted with
his brusquerie when we parted from the students, and
was gentle and considerate beyond anything, though
I knew that he must be grievously disappointed, both
in my courage and strength. Water was an object
of earnest desire. My tongue rattled in my mouth,
and I could hardly articulate. It is good for
one’s sympathies to have for once a severe experience
of thirst. Truly, there was
Water, water, everywhere,
But not a drop to drink.
Three times its apparent gleam deceived
even the mountaineer’s practiced eye, but we
found only a foot of “glare ice.”
At last, in a deep hole, he succeeded in breaking
the ice, and by putting one’s arm far down one
could scoop up a little water in one’s hand,
but it was tormentingly insufficient. With great
difficulty and much assistance I recrossed the “Lava
Beds,” was carried to the horse and lifted upon
him, and when we reached the camping ground I was lifted
off him, and laid on the ground wrapped up in blankets,
a humiliating termination of a great exploit.
The horses were saddled, and the young men were all
ready to start, but “Jim” quietly said,
“Now, gentlemen, I want a good night’s
rest, and we shan’t stir from here to-night.”
I believe they were really glad to have it so, as
one of them was quite “finished.”
I retired to my arbor, wrapped myself in a roll of
blankets, and was soon asleep.
When I woke, the moon was high shining
through the silvery branches, whitening the bald Peak
above, and glittering on the great abyss of snow behind,
and pine logs were blazing like a bonfire in the cold
still air. My feet were so icy cold that I could
not sleep again, and getting some blankets to sit
in, and making a roll of them for my back, I sat for
two hours by the camp-fire. It was weird and
gloriously beautiful. The students were asleep
not far off in their blankets with their feet towards
the fire. “Ring” lay on one side
of me with his fine head on my arm, and his master
sat smoking, with the fire lighting up the handsome
side of his face, and except for the tones of our
voices, and an occasional crackle and splutter as a
pine knot blazed up, there was no sound on the mountain
side. The beloved stars of my far-off home were
overhead, the Plough and Pole Star, with their steady
light; the glittering Pleiades, looking larger than
I ever saw them, and “Orion’s studded
belt” shining gloriously. Once only some
wild animals prowled near the camp, when “Ring,”
with one bound, disappeared from my side; and the
horses, which were picketed by the stream, broke their
lariats, stampeded, and came rushing wildly towards
the fire, and it was fully half an hour before they
were caught and quiet was restored. “Jim,”
or Mr. Nugent, as I always scrupulously called him,
told stories of his early youth, and of a great sorrow
which had led him to embark on a lawless and desperate
life. His voice trembled, and tears rolled down
his cheek. Was it semi-conscious acting, I wondered,
or was his dark soul really stirred to its depths by
the silence, the beauty, and the memories of youth?
We reached Estes Park at noon of the
following day. A more successful ascent of the
Peak was never made, and I would not now exchange my
memories of its perfect beauty and extraordinary sublimity
for any other experience of mountaineering in any
part of the world. Yesterday snow fell on the
summit, and it will be inaccessible for eight months
to come.
I.
L. B.