We
rumbled
over
the
plains
and
valleys, climbed
the
Sierras
to
the
clouds,
and
looked
down
upon
summer-clad California.
And
I
will
remark here,
in
passing,
that
all
scenery
in
California
requires
distance
to
give
it
its
highest
charm.
The
mountains
are
imposing
in
their
sublimity
and
their
majesty
of
form
and
altitude,
from
any
point
of
view—but
one
must
have
distance
to
soften
their
ruggedness
and
enrich
their
tintings; a Californian forest
is
best
at
a
little
distance,
for
there
is
a
sad
poverty
of
variety
in
species,
the
trees being chiefly
of
one
monotonous
family—redwood, pine, spruce, fir—and so,
at
a
near
view
there
is
a wearisome sameness
of
attitude
in
their
rigid
arms, stretched
down
ward
and
outward
in
one
continued
and
reiterated
appeal
to
all
men
to
"Sh!—don't
say
a word!—you
might
disturb
somebody!" Close
at
hand, too,
there
is
a reliefless
and
relentless
smell
of
pitch
and
turpentine;
there
is
a ceaseless melancholy
in
their
sighing
and
complaining
foliage;
one
walks
over
a soundless carpet
of
beaten
yellow
bark
and
dead
spines
of
the
foliage
till
he
feels
like
a
wandering
spirit bereft
of
a footfall;
he
tires
of
the
endless
tufts
of
needles
and
yearns
for
substantial, shapely leaves;
he
looks
for
moss
and
grass
to
loll
upon,
and
finds none,
for
where
there
is
no
bark
there
is
naked
clay
and
dirt,
enemies
to
pensive
musing
and
clean apparel.
Often
a grassy
plain
in
California,
is
what
it
should
be,
but
often, too,
it
is
best
contemplated
at
a distance,
because
although
its
grass
blades
are
tall,
they
stand
up
vindictively
straight
and
self-sufficient,
and
are
unsociably
wide
apart,
with
uncomely
spots
of
barren
sand between.
One
of
the
queerest
things
I
know
of,
is
to
hear
tourists
from
"the States"
go
into
ecstasies
over
the
loveliness
of
"ever-blooming California."
And
they
always
do
go
into
that
sort
of
ecstasies.
But
perhaps
they
would
modify
them
if
they
knew
how
old
Californians,
with
the
memory
full
upon
them
of
the
dust-covered
and
questionable
summer
greens
of
Californian "verdure,"
stand
astonished,
and
filled
with
worshipping admiration,
in
the
presence
of
the
lavish richness,
the
brilliant
green,
the
infinite
freshness,
the
spend-thrift
variety
of
form
and
species
and
foliage
that
make
an
Eastern
landscape a
vision
of
Paradise
itself.
The
idea
of
a
man
falling
into
raptures
over
grave
and
sombre
California,
when
that
man
has
seen
New
England's meadow-expanses
and
her
maples,
oaks
and
cathedral-windowed
elms
decked
in
summer
attire,
or
the
opaline
splendors
of
autumn
descending
upon
her
forests,
comes
very
near
being funny—would be,
in
fact,
but
that
it
is
so
pathetic.
No
land
with
an
unvarying climate
can
be
very
beautiful.
The
tropics
are
not,
for
all
the
sentiment
that
is
wasted
on
them.
They
seem
beautiful
at
first,
but
sameness
impairs
the
charm
by
and
by.
Change
is
the
handmaiden
Nature
requires
to
do
her
miracles
with.
The
land
that
has
four
well-defined seasons, cannot
lack
beauty,
or
pall
with
monotony.
Each
season
brings
a
world
of
enjoyment
and
interest
in
the
watching
of
its
unfolding,
its
gradual,
harmonious
development,
its
culminating
graces—and
just
as
one
begins
to
tire
of
it,
it
passes
away
and
a radical
change
comes,
with
new
witcheries
and
new
glories
in
its
train.
And
I
think
that
to
one
in
sympathy
with
nature,
each
season,
in
its
turn,
seems
the
loveliest. San Francisco, a
truly
fascinating
city
to
live
in,
is
stately
and
handsome
at
a
fair
distance,
but
close
at
hand
one
notes
that
the
architecture
is
mostly
old-fashioned,
many
streets
are
made
up
of
decaying, smoke-grimed,
wooden
houses,
and
the
barren
sand-hills
toward
the
outskirts
obtrude
themselves
too
prominently.
Even
the
kindly
climate
is
sometimes
pleasanter
when
read
about
than
personally experienced,
for
a lovely, cloudless
sky
wears
out
its
welcome
by
and
by,
and
then
when
the
longed
for
rain
does
come
it
stays.
Even
the
playful
earthquake
is
better
contemplated
at
a dis— However
there
are
varying
opinions
about
that.
The
climate
of
San Francisco
is
mild
and
singularly equable.
The
thermometer
stands
at
about
seventy
degrees
the
year
round.
It
hardly
changes
at
all.
You
sleep
under
one
or
two
light
blankets
Summer
and
Winter,
and
never
use
a
mosquito
bar.
Nobody
ever
wears
Summer
clothing.
You
wear
black
broadcloth—if
you
have
it—in
August
and
January,
just
the
same.
It
is
no
colder,
and
no
warmer,
in
the
one
month
than
the
other.
You
do
not
use
overcoats
and
you
do
not
use
fans.
It
is
as
pleasant
a climate
as
could
well
be
contrived,
take
it
all
around,
and
is
doubtless
the
most
unvarying
in
the
whole
world.
The
wind blows
there
a
good
deal
in
the
summer
months,
but
then
you
can
go
over
to
Oakland,
if
you
choose—three
or
four
miles
away—it
does
not
blow there.
It
has
only
snowed
twice
in
San Francisco
in
nineteen
years,
and
then
it
only
remained
on
the
ground
long
enough
to
astonish
the
children,
and
set
them
to
wondering
what
the
feathery
stuff
was.
During
eight
months
of
the
year, straight along,
the
skies
are
bright
and
cloudless,
and
never
a
drop
of
rain
falls.
But
when
the
other
four
months
come
along,
you
will
need
to
go
and
steal
an
umbrella.
Because
you
will
require
it.
Not
just
one
day,
but
one
hundred
and
twenty
days
in
hardly
varying
succession.
When
you
want
to
go
visiting,
or
attend
church,
or
the
theatre,
you
never
look
up
at
the
clouds
to
see
whether
it
is
likely
to
rain
or
not—you
look
at
the
almanac.
If
it
is
Winter,
it
will
rain—and
if
it
is
Summer,
it
won't rain,
and
you
cannot
help
it.
You
never
need
a lightning-rod,
because
it
never
thunders
and
it
never
lightens.
And
after
you
have
listened
for
six
or
eight
weeks,
every
night,
to
the
dismal
monotony
of
those
quiet
rains,
you
will
wish
in
your
heart
the
thunder
would
leap
and
crash
and
roar
along
those
drowsy
skies
once,
and
make
everything alive—you
will
wish
the
prisoned
lightnings
would
cleave
the
dull
firmament
asunder
and
light
it
with
a blinding
glare
for
one
little
instant.
You
would
give
anything
to
hear
the
old
familiar
thunder
again
and
see
the
lightning
strike somebody.
And
along
in
the
Summer,
when
you
have
suffered
about
four
months
of
lustrous, pitiless sunshine,
you
are
ready
to
go
down
on
your
knees
and
plead
for
rain—hail—snow—thunder
and
lightning—anything
to
break
the
monotony—you
will
take
an
earthquake,
if
you
cannot
do
any
better.
And
the
chances
are
that
you'll
get
it, too. San Francisco
is
built
on
sand hills,
but
they
are
prolific
sand hills.
They
yield
a
generous
vegetation.
All
the
rare
flowers
which
people
in
"the States" rear
with
such
patient
care
in
parlor
flower-pots
and
green- houses, flourish
luxuriantly
in
the
open
air
there
all
the
year
round. Calla lilies,
all
sorts
of
geraniums,
passion
flowers,
moss
roses—I
do
not
know
the
names
of
a
tenth
part
of
them. I
only
know
that
while
New
Yorkers
are
burdened
with
banks
and
drifts
of
snow, Californians
are
burdened
with
banks
and
drifts
of
flowers,
if
they
only
keep
their
hands
off
and
let
them
grow.
And
I
have
heard
that
they
have
also
that
rarest
and
most
curious
of
all
the
flowers,
the
beautiful Espiritu Santo,
as
the
Spaniards
call
it—or flower
of
the
Holy
Spirit—though I
thought
it
grew
only
in
Central
America—down
on
the
Isthmus.
In
its
cup
is
the
daintiest
little
facsimile
of
a dove,
as
pure
as
snow.
The
Spaniards
have
a
superstitious
reverence
for
it.
The
blossom
has been
conveyed
to
the
States,
submerged
in
ether;
and
the
bulb
has been taken
thither
also,
but
every
attempt
to
make
it
bloom
after
it
arrived, has failed. I
have
elsewhere
spoken
of
the
endless
Winter
of
Mono, California,
and
but
this
moment
of
the
eternal
Spring
of
San Francisco.
Now
if
we
travel a
hundred
miles
in
a straight line,
we
come
to
the
eternal
Summer
of
Sacramento.
One
never
sees
Summer-clothing
or
mosquitoes
in
San Francisco—but
they
can
be
found
in
Sacramento.
Not
always
and
unvaryingly,
but
about
one
hundred
and
forty-three
months
out
of
twelve
years, perhaps. Flowers
bloom
there, always,
the
reader
can
easily believe—people
suffer
and
sweat,
and
swear, morning,
noon
and
night,
and
wear
out
their
stanchest
energies
fanning
themselves.
It
gets
hot
there,
but
if
you
go
down
to
Fort
Yuma
you
will
find
it
hotter.
Fort
Yuma
is
probably
the
hottest
place
on
earth.
The
thermometer
stays
at
one
hundred
and
twenty
in
the
shade
there
all
the
time—except
when
it
varies
and
goes
higher.
It
is
a U.S. military post,
and
its
occupants
get
so
used
to
the
terrific
heat
that
they
suffer
without
it.
There
is
a
tradition
(attributed
to
John Phenix [It has been
purloined
by
fifty
different
scribblers
who
were
too
poor
to
invent
a fancy
but
not
ashamed
to
steal
one.—M. T.])
that
a very,
very
wicked
soldier
died
there, once,
and
of
course, went straight
to
the
hottest
corner
of
perdition,—and
the
next
day
he
telegraphed
back
for
his
blankets.
There
is
no
doubt
about
the
truth
of
this
statement—there
can
be
no
doubt
about
it. I
have
seen
the
place
where
that
soldier used
to
board.
In
Sacramento
it
is
fiery
Summer
always,
and
you
can
gather
roses,
and
eat
strawberries
and
ice-cream,
and
wear
white
linen
clothes,
and
pant
and
perspire,
at
eight
or
nine
o'clock
in
the
morning,
and
then
take
the
cars,
and
at
noon
put
on
your
furs
and
your
skates,
and
go
skimming
over
frozen Donner Lake,
seven
thousand
feet
above
the
valley,
among
snow
banks
fifteen
feet deep,
and
in
the
shadow
of
grand
mountain
peaks
that
lift
their
frosty
crags
ten
thousand
feet
above
the
level
of
the
sea.
There
is
a
transition
for
you!
Where
will
you
find
another
like
it
in
the
Western
hemisphere?
And
some
of
us
have
swept
around
snow-walled curves
of
the
Pacific
Railroad
in
that
vicinity,
six
thousand
feet
above
the
sea,
and
looked
down
as
the
birds
do,
upon
the
deathless
Summer
of
the
Sacramento
Valley,
with
its
fruitful fields,
its
feathery foliage,
its
silver
streams,
all
slumbering
in
the
mellow
haze
of
its
enchanted atmosphere,
and
all
infinitely softened
and
spiritualized
by
distance—a dreamy,
exquisite
glimpse
of
fairyland,
made
all
the
more
charming
and
striking
that
it
was
caught
through
a forbidden gateway
of
ice
and
snow,
and
savage
crags
and
precipices.