第 31 节
作者:双曲线      更新:2021-04-30 17:21      字数:9321
  edelweissartificial;      I   think   flowered     in   abundance;      they   sported
  severely  plain   flannel   shirts;  bloomers   of   an   aggressive   and   unnecessary
  cut; and enormous square boots weighing pounds。                  The men had on hats
  just off the sunbonnet effect; pleated Norfolk jackets; bloomers ditto ditto
  to the women; stockings whose tops rolled over innumerable times to help
  out the size of that which they should have contained; and also enormous
  square  boots。      The   female   children   they   put   in   skin…tight   blue   overalls。
  The male children they dressed in bloomers。              Why this should be I cannot
  tell   you。   All    carried   toy  hatchets    with   a  spike   on  one   end   built  to
  resemble the pictures of alpenstocks。
  They looked business…like; trod with an assured air of veterans and a
  seeming of experience more extended than it was possible to pack into any
  one     human     life。  We     stared   at  them;   our   eyes   bulging    out。    They
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  painfully   and   evidently   concealed   a   curiosity   as   to   our   pack…train。   We
  wished them good…day; in order to see to what language heaven had fitted
  their   extraordinary  ideas   as   regards   raiment。     They  inquired   the   way  to
  something or otherI think Sentinel Dome。                We had just arrived; so we
  did not know; but in order to show a friendly spirit we blandly pointed out
  A way。      It may have led to Sentinel Dome for all I know。              They departed
  uttering thanks in human speech。
  Now   this   particular   bunch   of   tourists   was   evidently   staying   at   the
  Glacier   Point;   and so   was   fresh。    But   in   the   course   of that   morning   we
  descended straight down a drop of; is it four thousand feet?                The trail was
  steep and long and without water。           During the descent we passed first and
  last probably twoscore of tourists; all on foot。            A good half of them were
  delicate   women;young;   middle…aged;   a   few   gray…   haired   and   evidently
  upwards      of  sixty。   There     were   also   old  men;    and   fat  men;   and    men
  otherwise   out   of   condition。     Probably   nine   out   of   ten;   counting   in   the
  entire outfit; were utterly unaccustomed; when at home where grow street…
  cars and hansoms; to even the mildest sort of exercise。                  They had come
  into   the   Valley;   whose   floor   is   over   four   thousand   feet   up;   without   the
  slightest physical preparation for the altitude。           They had submitted to the
  fatigue   of   a   long   and   dusty   stage   journey。  And   then   they   had   merrily
  whooped it up at a gait which would have appalled seasoned old stagers
  like ourselves。      Those blessed lunatics seemed positively unhappy unless
  they climbed up to some new point of view every day。                  I have never seen
  such     a  universally    tired  out;   frazzled;   vitally   exhausted;     white…faced;
  nervous community in my life as I   did during our four days' stay in the
  Valley。    Then probably they go away; and take a month to get over it; and
  have queer residual impressions of the trip。              I should like to know what
  those impressions really are。
  Not but that Nature has done everything in her power to oblige them。
  The things I am about to say are heresy; but I hold them true。
  Yosemite is not as interesting nor as satisfying to me as some of the
  other big box canons; like those of the Tehipite; the Kings in its branches;
  or the Kaweah。        I will admit that its waterfalls are better。           Otherwise it
  possesses no features which are not to be seen in its sister valleys。                 And
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  there    is  this  difference。      In   Yosemite      everything     is  jumbled      together;
  apparently for the benefit of the tourist with a linen duster and but three
  days'   time   at   his   disposal。    He   can   turn   from   the   cliff…headland   to   the
  dome;   from   the   dome   to   the   half   dome;   to   the   glacier   formation;   the
  granite slide and all the rest of it; with hardly the necessity of stirring his
  feet。    Nature   has   put   samples   of   all   her   works   here   within   reach   of   his
  cataloguing   vision。        Everything       is   crowded   in   together;   like   a   row   of
  houses      in  forty…foot     lots。   The     mere     things    themselves      are   here   in
  profusion      and   wonder;      but  the   appropriate     spacing;     the   approach;     the
  surrounding of subordinate detail which should lead in artistic gradation to
  the supreme feature these things; which are a real and essential part of
  esthetic   effect;   are   lacking   utterly   for   want   of   room。     The   place   is   not
  natural scenery; it is a junk…shop; a storehouse; a sample…room wherein the
  elements of natural scenery are to be viewed。                 It is not an arrangement of
  effects in accordance with the usual laws of landscape; but an abnormality;
  a freak of Nature。
  All these things are to be found elsewhere。                There are cliffs which to
  the   naked   eye   are   as   grand   as   El   Capitan;   domes;   half   domes;   peaks   as
  noble as any to be seen in the Valley; sheer drops as breath…taking as that
  from     Glacier    Point。     But    in  other    places   each    of   these   is  led  up   to
  appropriately;   and   stands   the   central   and   satisfying   feature   to   which   all
  other things look。         Then you journey on from your cliff; or whatever it
  happens   to   be;   until;   at   just   the   right   distance;   so   that   it   gains   from   the
  presence   of   its   neighbor   without   losing   from   its   proximity;   a   dome   or   a
  pinnacle takes to itself the right of prominence。                I concede the waterfalls;
  but in other respects I prefer the sister valleys。
  That is not to say that one should not visit Yosemite; nor that one will
  be disappointed。         It is grand beyond any  possible human   belief; and   no
  one;   even   a   nerve…frazzled   tourist;   can   gaze   on   it   without   the   strongest
  emotion。       Only it is not so intimately satisfying as it should be。                  It is a
  show。      You do not take it into your heart。            〃Whew!〃 you cry。          〃Isn't that
  a wonder!〃 then after a moment; 〃Looks just like the photographs。                         Up to
  sample。      Now let's go。〃
  As we descended the trail; we and the tourists aroused in each other a
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  mutual   interest。     One   husband   was   trying   to   encourage   his   young   and
  handsome   wife   to   go   on。     She   was   beautifully  dressed   for   the   part   in   a
  marvelous;       becoming      costume      of  whipcord      short   skirt;   high   laced
  elkskin   boots   and   the   rest   of   it;   but   in   all   her   magnificence   she   had   sat
  down on the ground; her back to the cliff; her legs across the trail; and was
  so tired out that she could hardly muster interest enough to pull them in
  out of the way of our horses' hoofs。              The man inquired anxiously of us
  how far it was to the top。          Now it was a long distance to the top; but a
  longer   to   the   bottom;   so   we   lied   a   lie   that   I   am   sure   was   immediately
  forgiven   us;   and   told   them   it   was   only   a   short   climb。   I   should   have
  offered them the use of Bullet; but Bullet had come far enough; and this
  was   only   one   of   a   dozen   such   cases。    In   marked   contrast   was   a   jolly
  white… haired clergyman of the bishop type who climbed vigorously and
  hailed us with a shout。
  The horses were decidedly unaccustomed to any such sights; and we
  sometimes had our hands full getting them by on the narrow way。                          The
  trail was safe enough; but it did have an edge; and that edge jumped pretty
  straight off。     It was interesting to observe how the tourists acted。                Some
  of them were perfect fools; and we had more trouble with them than we
  did   with   the   horses。    They   could   not   seem   to   get   the   notion   into   their
  heads that all we wanted them to do was to get on the inside and stand still。
  About half of them were terrified to death; so that at the crucial moment;
  just   as   a   horse   was   passing   them;   they