IN THE SHADOW OF ST. HELENA. and burrow like a coyote, nor climb a tree like a gorilla, is wrestling with his fate at a terrible disadvantage. If ydu have never seen Clear Lake, do not babble about Como and Geneva. Here are eighty square miles of water, lifted fifteen hundred feet above the sea, and encompassed by mountains whose flaming forges were put out but yesterday' if a thousand years may be taken as one day. One may see Clear Lake from the top of St. Helena, twenty miles distant, on a bright day. We saw it first from Lukonoma-an intervening mountain, about fifteen hundred feet high; a ribbon of blue water stretching away between the hills, with a solitary white sail-recognized only by bringing a tree in the range. There was the droning of the pines on the mountaintops in the afternoon trade - wind; a broad valley opening to the south, which swallowed up two or three mountain streams, and then opened its ugly, adobe lips for more; smaller valleys toward the north, encircled with tall firs, and the slumberous dome of Uncle Sam, lifting itself up grandly three or four thousand feet, hard by the lake. Along this Lukonoma ridge there is a well -defined Indian trail for miles. The Clear Lake Indians were accustomed to exchange visits with a tribe in the Lukonoma Valley, ten miles below. The tops of the highest mountain ridges were selected for trails, rather than the valley. The Indian does not like to be surprised, even by his friends. Along these ridges he could look off on either side, and a long way ahead. If not molested, he might drop down to the hot springs just at the base of the mountain; take a mud-bath'to make his joints a little more supple; and if he found an ant's.nest to add to his dietary stores, so much the better. You need not overhaul the Indian's cook-book. He ate the ants alive. No shrimp- eater ought to quarrel with him on that score. We shall have a nearer view of Lower Lake another day. It is better to have the first view of some old and famous city from the hill-tops. That revelation ripens into a picture which ever afterward we hasten to set over against the squalor and ugliness disclosed by a nearer view. One need not be wholly disgusted, if, in place of a trout, he has caught a mud-turtle from the lake which opened its sheen of waters to him first from the mountain summit. The shadows had stretched nearly across the narrow valleys when it occurred to us, that, in climbing to the highest and baldest peak, the Indian trail had run out, and that the hot springs -the point of departure-were eight miles distant, and were shut out of view by an intervening spur. Either a shortcut was to be made, trusting to luck to find a trail, or there was to be a night on the mountain. There were two intervening canons to be crossed before there was any prospect of striking a trail. It is not pleasant to slide a horse on his haunches down into one of these chasms without knowing where one is to bring up. If the most obscure cattle-trail can be found leading in, one may trust to the instincts of horse-sense to find it, and also the one which will most certainly lead out on the other side. The tinkling of a cow-bell on the table-lands beyond, was a welcome sound. The horses wound into the first cai'ioz, and went out without much hesitation. The trail for the next, by good luck, had been found. But it was a suspicious circumstance that these ponies accustomed to those defiles, and now heading for home -hesitated, snuffed, snorted, and turned about. The rein was given to them, but, hungry as they were, they seemned disposed to turn back. The little Cayuse pony trembled, threw his ears forward, advanced and retreated, and blew out a column of vapor from each nostril as he kept up his aboriginal snort. Ei 368 [APRIL,
In the Shadow of St. Helena [pp. 366-372]
Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 8, Issue 4
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- Sea-Studies - Nathan W. Moore - pp. 297-303
- A Ride Through Oregon - Joaquin Miller - pp. 303-310
- South Sea Bubbles - Charles Warren Stoddard - pp. 310
- Three Days of Sanctuary - Leonard Kip - pp. 311-324
- The Northern California Indians, No. I - Stephen Powers - pp. 325-333
- Exhumed - Andrew Williams - pp. 333-337
- Evelyn - Daniel O'Connell - pp. 337
- Wants and Advantages of California - John Hayes - pp. 338-347
- Yosemite Valley in Flood - J. Muir - pp. 347-350
- Juanita - Josephine Clifford - pp. 350-357
- Abigail Ray's Vision, Part I - James F. Bowman - pp. 358-365
- In the Shadow of St. Helena - W. C. Bartlett - pp. 366-372
- Sam Rice's Romance - Frances Fuller Victor - pp. 372-381
- Transition - Mrs. James Neall - pp. 381
- Etc. - pp. 382-386
- Current Literature - pp. 387-392
- Books of the Month - pp. 392
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- Bartlett, W. C.
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"In the Shadow of St. Helena [pp. 366-372]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ahj1472.1-08.004. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 23, 2025.