But no temple made with hands can compare with Yosemite.
Every rock in its walls seems to glow with life.
Some lean back in majestic repose; others, absolutely
sheer or nearly so for thousands of feet, advance
beyond their companions in thoughtful attitudes, giving
welcome to storms and calms alike, seemingly aware,
yet heedless, of everything going on about them.
Awful in stern, immovable majesty, how softly these
rocks are adorned, and how fine and reassuring the
company they keep: their feet among beautiful
groves and meadows, their brows in the sky, a thousand
flowers leaning confidingly against their feet, bathed
in floods of water, floods of light, while the snow
and waterfalls, the winds and avalanches and clouds
shine and sing and wreathe about them as the years
go by, and myriads of small winged creatures birds,
bees, butterflies—give glad animation and
help to make all the air into music. Down through
the middle of the Valley flows the crystal Merced,
River of Mercy, peacefully quiet, reflecting lilies
and trees and the onlooking rocks; things frail and
fleeting and types of endurance meeting here and blending
in countless forms, as if into this one mountain mansion
Nature had gathered her choicest treasures, to draw
her lovers into close and confiding communion with
her.
The Approach To The Valley
Sauntering up the foothills to Yosemite by any of
the old trails or roads in use before the railway
was built from the town of Merced up the river to
the boundary of Yosemite Park, richer and wilder become
the forests and streams. At an elevation of 6000
feet above the level of the sea the silver firs are
200 feet high, with branches whorled around the colossal
shafts in regular order, and every branch beautifully
pinnate like a fern frond. The Douglas spruce,
the yellow and sugar pines and brown-barked Libocedrus
here reach their finest developments of beauty and
grandeur. The majestic Sequoia is here, too, the
king of conifers, the noblest of all the noble race.
These colossal trees are as wonderful in fineness
of beauty and proportion as in stature—an
assemblage of conifers surpassing all that have ever
yet been discovered in the forests of the world.
Here indeed is the tree-lover’s paradise; the
woods, dry and wholesome, letting in the light in shimmering
masses of half sunshine, half shade; the night air
as well as the day air indescribably spicy and exhilarating;
plushy fir-boughs for campers’ beds and cascades
to sing us to sleep. On the highest ridges, over
which these old Yosemite ways passed, the silver fir
(Abies magnifica) forms the bulk of the woods, pressing
forward in glorious array to the very brink of the
Valley walls on both sides, and beyond the Valley to
a height of from 8000 to 9000 feet above the level
of the sea. Thus it appears that Yosemite, presenting
such stupendous faces of bare granite, is nevertheless
imbedded in magnificent forests, and the main species
of pine, fir, spruce and libocedrus are also found
in the Valley itself, but there are no “big
trees” (Sequoia gigantea) in the Valley or about
the rim of it. The nearest are about ten and twenty
miles beyond the lower end of the valley on small
tributaries of the Merced and Tuolumne Rivers.
Copyrights
The Yosemite from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.