A Mendocino Memory

A Mendocino Memory

Once in my lonely, eager youth I rode,With jingling spur, into the clouds’ abode—Rode northward lightly as the high crane goes—Rode into the hills in the month of the frail wild rose,To find the soft-eyed heifers in the herds,Strayed north along the trail of nesting birds,Following the slow march of the springing grass,From range to range, from pass to flowering pass.I took the trail: the fields were yet asleep;I saw the last star hurrying to its deep—Saw the shy wood-folk starting from their restIn many a crannied rock and leafy nest.A bold, tail-flashing squirrel in a fir,Restless as fire, set all the boughs astir;A jay, in dandy blue, flung out a fineFirst fleering sally from a sugar-pine.A flight of hills, and then a deep ravineHung with madrono boughs—the quail’s demesne;A quick turn in the road, a wingèd whir,And there he came with fluted whispering,The captain of the chaparral, the king,With nodding plume, with circumstance and stir,And step of Carthaginian conqueror!I climbed the canyon to a river-head,And looking backward saw a splendor spread,Miles beyond miles, of every kingly hueAnd trembling tint the looms of Arras knew—A flowery pomp as of the dying day,A splendor where a god might take his way.And farther on the wide plains under me,I watched the light-foot winds of morning go,Soft shading over wheat-fields far and free,To keep their old appointment with the sea.And farther yet, dim in the distant glow,Hung on the east a line of ghostly snow.After the many trails an open spaceWalled by the tulès of a perished lake;And there I stretched out, bending the green brake,And felt it cool against my heated face.My horse went cropping by a sunny crag,In wild oats taller than the antlered stagThat makes his pasture there. In gorge belowBlind waters pounded boulders, blow on blow—Waters that gather, scatter and amassDown the long canyons where the grizzlies pass,Slouching through manzanita thickets old,Strewing the small red apples on the ground,Tearing the wild grape from its tree-top hold,And wafting odors keen through all the hills around.Now came the fording of the hurling creeks,And joyous days among the breezy peaks,Till through the hush of many canyons fellThe faint quick tenor of a brazen bell,A sudden, soft, hill-stilled, far-falling word,That told the secret of the straying herd.It was the brink of night, and everywhereTall redwoods spread their filmy tops in air;Huge trunks, like shadows upon shadow cast,Pillared the under twilight, vague and vast.And one had fallen across the mountain way,A tree hurled down by hurricane to lieWith torn-out roots pronged-up against the skyAnd clutching still their little dole of clay.Lightly I broke green branches for a bed,And gathered ferns, a pillow for my head.And what to this were kingly chambers worth—Sleeping, an ant, upon the sheltering earth,High over Mendocino’s windy capes,Where ships go flying south like shadow-shapes—Gleam into vision and go fading on,Bearing the pines hewn out of Oregon.

Once in my lonely, eager youth I rode,With jingling spur, into the clouds’ abode—Rode northward lightly as the high crane goes—Rode into the hills in the month of the frail wild rose,To find the soft-eyed heifers in the herds,Strayed north along the trail of nesting birds,Following the slow march of the springing grass,From range to range, from pass to flowering pass.I took the trail: the fields were yet asleep;I saw the last star hurrying to its deep—Saw the shy wood-folk starting from their restIn many a crannied rock and leafy nest.A bold, tail-flashing squirrel in a fir,Restless as fire, set all the boughs astir;A jay, in dandy blue, flung out a fineFirst fleering sally from a sugar-pine.A flight of hills, and then a deep ravineHung with madrono boughs—the quail’s demesne;A quick turn in the road, a wingèd whir,And there he came with fluted whispering,The captain of the chaparral, the king,With nodding plume, with circumstance and stir,And step of Carthaginian conqueror!I climbed the canyon to a river-head,And looking backward saw a splendor spread,Miles beyond miles, of every kingly hueAnd trembling tint the looms of Arras knew—A flowery pomp as of the dying day,A splendor where a god might take his way.And farther on the wide plains under me,I watched the light-foot winds of morning go,Soft shading over wheat-fields far and free,To keep their old appointment with the sea.And farther yet, dim in the distant glow,Hung on the east a line of ghostly snow.After the many trails an open spaceWalled by the tulès of a perished lake;And there I stretched out, bending the green brake,And felt it cool against my heated face.My horse went cropping by a sunny crag,In wild oats taller than the antlered stagThat makes his pasture there. In gorge belowBlind waters pounded boulders, blow on blow—Waters that gather, scatter and amassDown the long canyons where the grizzlies pass,Slouching through manzanita thickets old,Strewing the small red apples on the ground,Tearing the wild grape from its tree-top hold,And wafting odors keen through all the hills around.Now came the fording of the hurling creeks,And joyous days among the breezy peaks,Till through the hush of many canyons fellThe faint quick tenor of a brazen bell,A sudden, soft, hill-stilled, far-falling word,That told the secret of the straying herd.It was the brink of night, and everywhereTall redwoods spread their filmy tops in air;Huge trunks, like shadows upon shadow cast,Pillared the under twilight, vague and vast.And one had fallen across the mountain way,A tree hurled down by hurricane to lieWith torn-out roots pronged-up against the skyAnd clutching still their little dole of clay.Lightly I broke green branches for a bed,And gathered ferns, a pillow for my head.And what to this were kingly chambers worth—Sleeping, an ant, upon the sheltering earth,High over Mendocino’s windy capes,Where ships go flying south like shadow-shapes—Gleam into vision and go fading on,Bearing the pines hewn out of Oregon.

Once in my lonely, eager youth I rode,With jingling spur, into the clouds’ abode—Rode northward lightly as the high crane goes—Rode into the hills in the month of the frail wild rose,To find the soft-eyed heifers in the herds,Strayed north along the trail of nesting birds,Following the slow march of the springing grass,From range to range, from pass to flowering pass.

Once in my lonely, eager youth I rode,

With jingling spur, into the clouds’ abode—

Rode northward lightly as the high crane goes—

Rode into the hills in the month of the frail wild rose,

To find the soft-eyed heifers in the herds,

Strayed north along the trail of nesting birds,

Following the slow march of the springing grass,

From range to range, from pass to flowering pass.

I took the trail: the fields were yet asleep;I saw the last star hurrying to its deep—Saw the shy wood-folk starting from their restIn many a crannied rock and leafy nest.A bold, tail-flashing squirrel in a fir,Restless as fire, set all the boughs astir;A jay, in dandy blue, flung out a fineFirst fleering sally from a sugar-pine.

I took the trail: the fields were yet asleep;

I saw the last star hurrying to its deep—

Saw the shy wood-folk starting from their rest

In many a crannied rock and leafy nest.

A bold, tail-flashing squirrel in a fir,

Restless as fire, set all the boughs astir;

A jay, in dandy blue, flung out a fine

First fleering sally from a sugar-pine.

A flight of hills, and then a deep ravineHung with madrono boughs—the quail’s demesne;A quick turn in the road, a wingèd whir,And there he came with fluted whispering,The captain of the chaparral, the king,With nodding plume, with circumstance and stir,And step of Carthaginian conqueror!

A flight of hills, and then a deep ravine

Hung with madrono boughs—the quail’s demesne;

A quick turn in the road, a wingèd whir,

And there he came with fluted whispering,

The captain of the chaparral, the king,

With nodding plume, with circumstance and stir,

And step of Carthaginian conqueror!

I climbed the canyon to a river-head,And looking backward saw a splendor spread,Miles beyond miles, of every kingly hueAnd trembling tint the looms of Arras knew—A flowery pomp as of the dying day,A splendor where a god might take his way.

I climbed the canyon to a river-head,

And looking backward saw a splendor spread,

Miles beyond miles, of every kingly hue

And trembling tint the looms of Arras knew—

A flowery pomp as of the dying day,

A splendor where a god might take his way.

And farther on the wide plains under me,I watched the light-foot winds of morning go,Soft shading over wheat-fields far and free,To keep their old appointment with the sea.And farther yet, dim in the distant glow,Hung on the east a line of ghostly snow.

And farther on the wide plains under me,

I watched the light-foot winds of morning go,

Soft shading over wheat-fields far and free,

To keep their old appointment with the sea.

And farther yet, dim in the distant glow,

Hung on the east a line of ghostly snow.

After the many trails an open spaceWalled by the tulès of a perished lake;And there I stretched out, bending the green brake,And felt it cool against my heated face.My horse went cropping by a sunny crag,In wild oats taller than the antlered stagThat makes his pasture there. In gorge belowBlind waters pounded boulders, blow on blow—Waters that gather, scatter and amassDown the long canyons where the grizzlies pass,Slouching through manzanita thickets old,Strewing the small red apples on the ground,Tearing the wild grape from its tree-top hold,And wafting odors keen through all the hills around.

After the many trails an open space

Walled by the tulès of a perished lake;

And there I stretched out, bending the green brake,

And felt it cool against my heated face.

My horse went cropping by a sunny crag,

In wild oats taller than the antlered stag

That makes his pasture there. In gorge below

Blind waters pounded boulders, blow on blow—

Waters that gather, scatter and amass

Down the long canyons where the grizzlies pass,

Slouching through manzanita thickets old,

Strewing the small red apples on the ground,

Tearing the wild grape from its tree-top hold,

And wafting odors keen through all the hills around.

Now came the fording of the hurling creeks,And joyous days among the breezy peaks,Till through the hush of many canyons fellThe faint quick tenor of a brazen bell,A sudden, soft, hill-stilled, far-falling word,That told the secret of the straying herd.

Now came the fording of the hurling creeks,

And joyous days among the breezy peaks,

Till through the hush of many canyons fell

The faint quick tenor of a brazen bell,

A sudden, soft, hill-stilled, far-falling word,

That told the secret of the straying herd.

It was the brink of night, and everywhereTall redwoods spread their filmy tops in air;Huge trunks, like shadows upon shadow cast,Pillared the under twilight, vague and vast.And one had fallen across the mountain way,A tree hurled down by hurricane to lieWith torn-out roots pronged-up against the skyAnd clutching still their little dole of clay.

It was the brink of night, and everywhere

Tall redwoods spread their filmy tops in air;

Huge trunks, like shadows upon shadow cast,

Pillared the under twilight, vague and vast.

And one had fallen across the mountain way,

A tree hurled down by hurricane to lie

With torn-out roots pronged-up against the sky

And clutching still their little dole of clay.

Lightly I broke green branches for a bed,And gathered ferns, a pillow for my head.And what to this were kingly chambers worth—Sleeping, an ant, upon the sheltering earth,High over Mendocino’s windy capes,Where ships go flying south like shadow-shapes—Gleam into vision and go fading on,Bearing the pines hewn out of Oregon.

Lightly I broke green branches for a bed,

And gathered ferns, a pillow for my head.

And what to this were kingly chambers worth—

Sleeping, an ant, upon the sheltering earth,

High over Mendocino’s windy capes,

Where ships go flying south like shadow-shapes—

Gleam into vision and go fading on,

Bearing the pines hewn out of Oregon.


Back to IndexNext