The Nevada Fall is 600 feet high and is usually ranked
next to the Yosemite in general interest among the
five main falls of the Valley. Coming through
the Little Yosemite in tranquil reaches, the river
is first broken into rapids on a moraine boulder-bar
that crosses the lower end of the Valley. Thence
it pursues its way to the head of the fall in a rough,
solid rock channel, dashing on side angles, heaving
in heavy surging masses against elbow knobs, and swirling
and swashing in pot-holes without a moment’s
rest. Thus, already chafed and dashed to foam,
overfolded and twisted, it plunges over the brink of
the precipice as if glad to escape into the open air.
But before it reaches the bottom it is pulverized
yet finer by impinging upon a sloping portion of the
cliff about half-way down, thus making it the whitest
of all the falls of the Valley, and altogether one
of the most wonderful in the world.
On the north side, close to its head, a slab of granite
projects over the brink, forming a fine point for
a view, over its throng of streamers and wild plunging,
into its intensely white bosom, and through the broad
drifts of spray, to the river far below, gathering
its spent waters and rushing on again down the canyon
in glad exultation into Emerald Pool, where at length
it grows calm and gets rest for what still lies before
it. All the features of the view correspond with
the waters in grandeur and wildness. The glacier
sculptured walls of the canyon on either hand, with
the sublime mass of the Glacier Point Ridge in front,
form a huge triangular pit-like basin, which, filled
with the roaring of the falling river seems as if
it might be the hopper of one of the mills of the gods
in which the mountains were being ground.
The Vernal Fall
The Vernal, about a mile below the Nevada, is 400
feet high, a staid, orderly, graceful, easy-going
fall, proper and exact in every movement and gesture,
with scarce a hint of the passionate enthusiasm of
the Yosemite or of the impetuous Nevada, whose chafed
and twisted waters hurrying over the cliff seem glad
to escape into the open air, while its deep, booming,
thunder-tones reverberate over the listening landscape.
Nevertheless it is a favorite with most visitors, doubtless
because it is more accessible than any other, more
closely approached and better seen and heard.
A good stairway ascends the cliff beside it and the
level plateau at the head enables one to saunter safely
along the edge of the river as it comes from Emerald
Pool and to watch its waters, calmly bending over
the brow of the precipice, in a sheet eighty feet
wide, changing in color from green to purplish gray
and white until dashed on a boulder talus. Thence
issuing from beneath its fine broad spray-clouds we
see the tremendously adventurous river still unspent,
beating its way down the wildest and deepest of all
its canyons in gray roaring rapids, dear to the ouzel,
and below the confluence of the Illilouette, sweeping
around the shoulder of the Half Dome on its approach
to the head of the tranquil levels of the Valley.
Copyrights
The Yosemite from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.