Beauty Revisited
Being in awe of Mother Nature in Park
County has always been the locals pride. This column found in a
March 1880’s edition of the Flume was particularly eloquent for
the newspaper at that time.
The Millionaire and Nature’s Poet
Child
“Railroads have made the Rocky Mountains
country familiar and contiguous, I may say, to the whole
world; but the somber canon, the bald and blackened cliff,
the velvety park and the snowy, silent peak that forever
rests against the soft blue sky are ever new. The foamy green of the
torrent has whirled past the giant walls of nature’s mighty
fortress myriad’s of years, perhaps, and the stars have
looked down into the great heart of earth for centuries
where the silver thread of streams, thousands of feet below,
has been patiently carving out the dark canon where the eagles and the
solemn echo have their home.
I said this to a gentleman from Leadville
a short time ago as we toiled up Kenosha hill, between
Platte Canon and the South Park, on the South Park and
Pacific railway. He said that might be true
in some cases and even more so, perhaps, depending entirely
on whether it would or not.
I do not believe at this moment that he
thoroughly understood me. He was only a millionaire,
and his soul, very likely, had never throbbed and
thrilled with
the mysterious music nature yields to her poet
child.
He could talk on and on of porphyry walls
and contact veins, gray copper and ruby silver, and
sulphurets and pyrites of iron, but when my eye kindled with
the majestic beauty of these eternal battlements and my
voice trembled a little with awe and wonder; while my heart
throbbed and thrilled in the midst of nature’s eloquent,
golden silence, this man sat there like an Ettruscan ham and
refused to throb or thrill. He was about as
unsatisfactory a throbber and thriller as I have met for
years.
At an elevation of over 10,000 feet above
high water mark, Fahrenheit, the South Park, a hundred miles
long, surrounded by precipitous mountains or green and
sloping foot-hills, burst upon us. In the clear, still air, a
hundred miles away, at Pueblo, I could hear a promissory
note and cut-throat mortgage drawing three per cent a
month. So calm
and unruffled was the rarefied air that I fancied I could
hear the thirteenth assessment on a share of stock at
Leadville toiling away at the bottom of a 250-foot shaft.
Colorado
air is so pure
that men in New York have, in several instances, heard the
dull rumble of an assessment working as far away as the San
Juan country.
At Como, in the Park, I met Col.
Wellington Wade, the Duke of Dirty Woman’s Ranche, and
barber extraordinary to old Stand-up-and-Yowl, chief of the
Pie-biters.
Col. Wade is a reformed temperance
lecturer. I
went to his shop to get shaved, but he was
absent. I could
smell hair oil through the keyhole, but the colonel was not
in his slab inlaid emporium He had been preparing
another lecture on temperance, and was at that moment
studying the habits of his adversary at a neighboring gin
palace. I sat
down on the steps and devoured the beautiful landscape till
he came. Then I sat down in the chair, and he hovered over
me while he talked about an essay he had written on the
following bowl.
His arguments were not so strong as his breath seemed to
be. I asked him
if he wouldn’t breathe the other way awhile, and let me
sober up. I
learned afterward that although his nose was red, his essay
was not.
He would shave me for a few moments, and
then he would hone the razor on his breath and begin over
again. I think
he must have been pickling his lungs in
alcohol. I
never met a more pronounced gin cocktail symphony and
bologna sausage study in my life.
I think Sir Walter Scott must have referred to Colonel Wade
when he said, ‘Breathes there a man with soul so
dead?’ Colonel
Wade’s soul might not have been dead, but it certainly did not
enjoy perfect health.
I went over the mountains to Breckenridge
the next day, climbed two miles perpendicularly into the
sky, rode on a special train one day, a push car the next
and a narrow-gage engine the next. Saw all the beauty of the
country, in chase of Superintendent Smith, went over to
Buena Vista and had a congestion of the spine and a good
time generally.
You can leave Denver on a morning train and see enough wild,
grand, picturesque loveliness before supper to store away in
your heart and hang upon the walls of memory, to last you
all through your busy hum-drum life, and it is a good
investment, too. - Bill Nye.”
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