Tales of lonely trails eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 476 pages of information about Tales of lonely trails.

Tales of lonely trails eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 476 pages of information about Tales of lonely trails.
ships, and coal-diggers, and blast-furnace hands—­like thousands and millions of men, killed themselves outright or impaired their strength, and when they were gone or rendered useless others were found to take their places.  Whenever I come in contact with some phase of this problem of life I take the meaning or the lesson of it to myself.  And as the years go by my respect and reverence and wonder increase for these men of elemental lives, these horny-handed toilers with physical things, these uncomplaining users of brawn and bone, these giants who breast the elements, who till the earth and handle iron, who fight the natural forces with their bodies.

That day about noon I looked back down the long gravel and greasewood slope which we had ascended and I saw the borax-mill now only a smoky blot on the desert floor.  When we reached the pass between the Black Mountains and the Funeral Mountains we left the road, and were soon lost to the works of man.  How strange a gladness, a relief!  Something dropped away from me.  I felt the same subtle change in Nielsen.  For one thing he stopped talking, except an occasional word to the mules.

The blunt end of the Funeral Range was as remarkable as its name.  It sheered up very high, a saw-toothed range with colored strata tilted at an angle of forty-five degrees.  Zigzag veins of black and red and yellow, rather dull, ran through the great drab-gray mass.  This end of the range, an iron mountain, frowned down upon us with hard and formidable aspect.  The peak was draped in streaky veils of rain from low-dropping clouds that appeared to have lodged there.  All below lay clear and cold in the sunlight.

[Illustration:  THE COLORED CALICO MOUNTAINS]

[Illustration:  DOWN THE LONG WINDING WASH TO DEATH VALLEY]

Our direction lay to the westward, and at that altitude, about three thousand feet, how pleasant to face the sun!  For the wind was cold.  The narrow shallow wash leading down from the pass deepened, widened, almost imperceptibly at first, and then gradually until its proportions were striking.  It was a gully where the gravel washed down during rains, and where a scant vegetation, greasewood, and few low cacti and scrubby sage struggled for existence.  Not a bird or lizard or living creature in sight!  The trail was getting lonely.  From time to time I looked back, because as we could not see far ahead all the superb scene spread and towered behind us.  By and bye our wash grew to be a wide canyon, winding away from under the massive, impondering wall of the Funeral Range.  The high side of this magnificent and impressive line of mountains faced west—­a succession of unscalable slopes of bare ragged rock, jagged and jutted, dark drab, rusty iron, with gray and oblique strata running through them far as eye could see.  Clouds soared around the peaks.  Shadows sailed along the slopes.

[Illustration:  DESOLATION AND DECAY.  LOOKING DOWN OVER THE DENUDED RIDGES TO THE STARK VALLEY OF DEATH]

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Tales of lonely trails from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.