Monterey, Cal.
THE PINE FOREST OF MONTEREY.
HAT point of Time, unchronicled, and dim
As yon gray mist that canopies your heads, Took from the greedy wave and gave the sun Your dwelling-place, ye gaunt and hoary Pines? When, from the barren bosoms of the hills, With scanty nurture, did ye slowly climb, Of these remote and latest-fashioned shores The first-born forest? Titans gnarled and rough, Such as from out subsiding Chaos grew To clothe the cold loins of the savage earth, What fresh commixture of the elements, What earliest thrill of life, the stubborn soil Slow-mastering, engendered ye to give
The hills a mantle and the wind a voice? Along the shore ye lift your rugged arms, Blackened with many fires, and with hoarse chant, — Unlike the fibrous lute your co-mates touch In elder regions, - fill the awful stops Between the crashing cataracts of the surf. Have ye no tongue, in all your sea of sound, To syllable the secret, - -no still voice
To give your airy myths a shadowy form,
And make us of lost centuries of lore
Your mossy beards, and gathering as they sweep,
Vex your high heads, and with your sinewy arms Grapple and toil in vain. A deeper roar, Sullen and cold, and rousing into spells Of stormy volume, is your sole reply. Anchored in firm-set rock, ye ride the blast, And from the promontory's utmost verge Make signal o'er the waters. So ye stood, When, like a star, behind the lonely sea, Far shone the white speck of Grijalva's sail; And when, through driving fog, the breaker's sound Frighted Otondo's men, your spicy breath
Played as in welcome round their rusty helms, And backward from its staff shook out the folds Of Spain's emblazoned banner.
Ye bear no record of the years of man.
Spring is your sole historian,
These savage shores with hues of Paradise; That decks your branches with a fresher green, And through your lonely, far cañadas pours Her floods of bloom, rivers of opal dye
That wander down to lakes and widening seas Of blossom and of fragrance, -- laughing Spring, That with her wanton blood refills your veins, And weds ye to your juicy youth again With a new ring, the while your rifted bark Drops odorous tears. Your knotty fibres yield To the light touch of her unfailing pen, As freely as the lupin's violet cup.
Ye keep, close-locked, the memories of her stay,
As in their shells the avelonès keep
Morn's rosy flush and moonlight's pearly glow. The wild northwest, that from Alaska sweeps, To drown Point Lobos with the icy scud And white sea-fɔam, may rend your boughs and leave Their blasted antlers tossing in the gale;
Your steadfast hearts are mailed against the shock, And on their annual tablets naught inscribe
Of such rude visitation. Ye are still The simple children of a guiltless soil, And in your natures show the sturdy grain That passion caunot jar, nor force relax, Nor aught but sweet and kindly airs compel To gentler mood. No disappointed heart Has sighed its bitterness beneath your shade; No angry spirit ever came to make
Your silence its confessional; no voice,
Grown harsh in Crime's great market-place, the world, Tainted with blasphemy your evening hush And aromatic air. The deer alone,
The ambushed hunter that brings down the deer, – The fisher wandering on the misty shore
To watch sea-lions wallow in the flood, The shout, the sound of hoofs that chase and fly, When swift vaqueros, dashing through the herds, Ride down the angry bull, perchance, the song Some Indian heired of long-forgotten sires, Disturb your solemn chorus.
But few more years around the promontory
Your chant will meet the thunders of the sea. No more, a barrier to the encroaching sand, Against the surf ye'll stretch defiant arm, Though with its onset and besieging shock Your firm knees tremble. Nevermore the wind Shall pipe shrill music through your mossy beards, Nor sunset's yellow blaze athwart your heads Crown all the hills with gold. Your race is past: The mystic cycle, whose unnoted birth
Coeval was with yours, has run its sands, And other footsteps from these changing shores Frighten its haunting Spirit. Men will come To vex your quiet with the din of toil; The smoky volumes of the forge will stain This pure, sweet air; loud keels will ride the sea, Dashing its glittering sapphire into foam; Through all her green cañadas Spring will seek Her lavish blooms in vain, and clasping ye, O mournful Pines, within her glowing arms, Will weep soft rains to find ye fallen low. Fall, therefore, yielding to the fiat! Fall, Ere the maturing soil, whose first dull life Fed your belated germs, be rent and seamed! Fall, like the chiefs ye sheltered, stern, unbent, Your gray beards hiding memorable scars! The winds will mourn ye, and the barren hills Whose breast ye clothed; and when the pauses come Between the crashing cataracts of the surf,
A funeral silence, terrible, profound,
Will make sad answer to the listening sea.
E reached the top - I scarce know how And stood upon the mountain's brow. Our weary limbs and wasted strength Are straightway all forgotten now. What vastness and sublimity Were spread before our eager gaze! What wild and varied scenery! What pictures for the poet's lays! Among the passing clouds we stood And looked about us, and below, O'er mountains, valleys, lakes, and wood, And rivers in meandering flow,
As lovely as God's tinted bow.
East, and below, lay Washoe Vale, The Village, and the shining Lake, And Steamboat's boiling springs, that pour Their scalding torrents through the crust And make their sounding caverns quake. As struggling currents hiss and roar, A hundred seething jets of steam Out from the foaming founts are thrust, Along the white crustation seam, And in the sunlight palely gleam, Weird as the spectres of a dream, And yet we see them when awake. Then next the gloomy peaks that break
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