American Monthly Magazine 1 (January 1836)
[I. Introduction]
The
essay, which is here offered, is a mere sketch of an almost illimitable
subject--American Scenery; and in selecting the theme the writer placed
more confidence in its overflowing richness, than in his own capacity
for treating it in a manner worthy of its vastness and importance.
It
is a subject that to every American ought to be of surpassing interest;
for, whether he beholds the Hudson mingling waters with the
Atlantic--explores the central wilds of this vast continent, or stands
on the margin of the distant Oregon, he is still in the midst of
American scenery--it is his own land; its beauty, its magnificence, its
sublimity--all are his; and how undeserving of such a birthright, if he
can turn towards it an unobserving eye, an unaffected heart!
Before
entering into the proposed subject, in which I shall treat more
particularly of the scenery of the Northern and Eastern States, I shall
be excused for saying a few words on the advantages of cultivating a
taste for scenery, and for exclaiming against the apathy with which the
beauties of external nature are regarded by the great mass, even of our
refined community.
[1. The Contemplation of Scenery as a Source of Delight and Improvement]
It
is generally admitted that the liberal arts tend to soften our manners;
but they do more--they carry with them the power to mend our hearts.
Poetry
and Painting sublime and purify thought, by grasping the past, the
present, and the future--they give the mind a foretaste of its
immortality, and thus prepare it for performing an exalted part amid
the realities of life. And rural nature is full of the same quickening
spirit--it is, in fact, the exhaustless mine from which the poet and
the painter have brought such wondrous treasures--an unfailing fountain
of intellectual enjoyment, where all may drink, and be awakened to a
deeper feeling of the works of genius, and a keener perception of the
beauty of our existence. For those whose days are all consumed in the
low pursuits of avarice, or the gaudy frivolities of fashion,
unobservant of nature's loveliness, are unconscious of the harmony of
creation--
Heaven's
roof to them Is but a painted ceiling hung with lamps; No more--that
lights them to their purposes-- They wander 'loose about;' they nothing
see, Themselves except, and creatures like themselves, Short lived,
short sighted.
What
to them is the page of the poet where he describes or personifies the
skies, the mountains, or the streams, if those objects themselves have
never awakened observation or excited pleasure? What to them is the
wild Salvator Rosa, or the aerial Claude Lorrain?
There
is in the human mind an almost inseparable connection between the
beautiful and the good, so that if we contemplate the one the other
seems present; and an excellent author has said, "it is difficult to
look at any objects with pleasure--unless where it arises from brutal
and tumultuous emotions--without feeling that disposition of mind which
tends towards kindness and benevolence; and surely, whatever creates
such a disposition, by increasing our pleasures and enjoyments, cannot
be too much cultivated."
It
would seem unnecessary to those who can see and feel, for me to
expatiate on the loveliness of verdant fields, the sublimity of lofty
mountains, or the varied magnificence of the sky; but that the number
of those who seek enjoyment in such sources is comparatively small.
From the indifference with which the multitude regard the beauties of
nature, it might be inferred that she had been unnecessarily lavish in
adorning this world for beings who take no pleasure in its adornment.
Who in grovelling pursuits forget their glorious heritage. Why was the
earth made so beautiful, or the sun so clad in glory at his rising and
setting, when all might be unrobed of beauty without affecting the
insensate multitude, so they can be "lighted to their purposes?"
It
has not been in vain--the good, the enlightened of all ages and
nations, have found pleasure and consolation in the beauty of the rural
earth. Prophets of old retired into the solitudes of nature to wait the
inspiration of heaven. It was on Mount Horeb that Elijah witnessed the
mighty wind, the earthquake, and the fire; and heard the "still small
voice"--that voice is YET heard among the mountains! St. John preached
in the desert;--the wilderness is YET a fitting place to speak of God.
The solitary Anchorites of Syria and Egypt, though ignorant that the
busy world is man's noblest sphere of usefulness, well knew how
congenial to religious musings are the pathless solitudes.
He
who looks on nature with a "loving eye," cannot move from his dwelling
without the salutation of beauty; even in the city the deep blue sky
and the drifting clouds appeal to him. And if to escape its turmoil--if
only to obtain a free horizon, land and water in the play of light and
shadow yields delight--let him be transported to those favored regions,
where the features of the earth are more varied, or yet add the sunset,
that wreath of glory daily bound around the world, and he, indeed,
drinks from pleasure's purest cup. The delight such a man experiences
is not merely sensual, or selfish, that passes with the occasion
leaving no trace behind; but in gazing on the pure creations of the
Almighty, he feels a calm religious tone steal through his mind, and
when he has turned to mingle with his fellow men, the chords which have
been struck in that sweet communion cease not to vibrate.
In
what has been said I have alluded to wild and uncultivated scenery; but
the cultivated must not be forgotten, for it is still more important to
man in his social capacity--necessarily bringing him in contact with
the cultured; it encompasses our homes, and, though devoid of the stern
sublimity of the wild, its quieter spirit steals tenderly into our
bosoms mingled with a thousand domestic affections and heart-touching
associations--human hands have wrought, and human deeds hallowed all
around.
And it is
here that taste, which is the perception of the beautiful, and the
knowledge of the principles on which nature works, can be applied, and
our dwelling-places made fitting for refined and intellectual beings.
[2. The Advantages of Cultivating a Taste for Scenery]
If,
then, it is indeed true that the contemplation of scenery can be so
abundant a source of delight and improvement, a taste for it is
certainly worthy of particular cultivation; for the capacity for
enjoyment increases with the knowledge of the true means of obtaining
it.
In this age,
when a meager utilitarianism seems ready to absorb every feeling and
sentiment, and what is sometimes called improvement in its march makes
us fear that the bright and tender flowers of the imagination shall all
be crushed beneath its iron tramp, it would be well to cultivate the
oasis that yet remains to us, and thus preserve the germs of a future
and a purer system. And now, when the sway of fashion is extending
widely over society--poisoning the healthful streams of true
refinement, and turning men from the love of simplicity and beauty, to
a senseless idolatry of their own follies--to lead them gently into the
pleasant paths of Taste would be an object worthy of the highest
efforts of genius and benevolence. The spirit of our society is to
contrive but not to enjoy--toiling to produce more toil-accumulating in
order to aggrandize. The pleasures of the imagination, among which the
love of scenery holds a conspicuous place, will alone temper the
harshness of such a state; and, like the atmosphere that softens the
most rugged forms of the landscape, cast a veil of tender beauty over
the asperities of life.
Did
our limits permit I would endeavor more fully to show how necessary to
the complete appreciation of the Fine Arts is the study of scenery, and
how conducive to our happiness and well-being is that study and those
arts; but I must now proceed to the proposed subject of this
essay--American Scenery!
[II. The Elements of American Scenery]
There
are those who through ignorance or prejudice strive to maintain that
American scenery possesses little that is interesting or truly
beautiful--that it is rude without picturesqueness, and monotonous
without sublimity--that being destitute of those vestiges of antiquity,
whose associations so strongly affect the mind, it may not be compared
with European scenery. But from whom do these opinions come? From those
who have read of European scenery, of Grecian mountains, and Italian
skies, and never troubled themselves to look at their own; and from
those travelled ones whose eyes were never opened to the beauties of
nature until they beheld foreign lands, and when those lands faded from
the sight were again closed and forever; disdaining to destroy their
trans-atlantic impressions by the observation of the less fashionable
and unfamed American scenery. Let such persons shut themselves up in
their narrow shell of prejudice--I hope they are few,--and the
community increasing in intelligence, will know better how to
appreciate the treasures of their own country.
I
am by no means desirous of lessening in your estimation the glorious
scenes of the old world--that ground which has been the great theater
of human events--those mountains, woods, and streams, made sacred in
our minds by heroic deeds and immortal song--over which time and genius
have suspended an imperishable halo. No! But I would have it remembered
that nature has shed over this land beauty and magnificence, and
although the character of its scenery may differ from the old world's,
yet inferiority must not therefore be inferred; for though American
scenery is destitute of many of those circumstances that give value to
the European, still it has features, and glorious ones, unknown to
Europe.
[1. Wildness]
A
very few generations have passed away since this vast tract of the
American continent, now the United States, rested in the shadow of
primeval forests, whose gloom was peopled by savage beasts, and
scarcely less savage men; or lay in those wide grassy plains called
prairies--
The Gardens of the Desert, these The unshorn fields, boundless and beautiful.
And,
although an enlightened and increasing people have broken in upon the
solitude, and with activity and power wrought changes that seem
magical, yet the most distinctive, and perhaps the most impressive,
characteristic of American scenery is its wildness.
It
is the most distinctive, because in civilized Europe the primitive
features of scenery have long since been destroyed or modified--the
extensive forests that once overshadowed a great part of it have been
felled--rugged mountains have been smoothed, and impetuous rivers
turned from their courses to accommodate the tastes and necessities of
a dense population--the once tangled wood is now a grassy lawn; the
turbulent brook a navigable stream--crags that could not be removed
have been crowned with towers, and the rudest valleys tamed by the
plough.
And to
this cultivated state our western world is fast approaching; but nature
is still predominant, and there are those who regret that with the
improvements of cultivation the sublimity of the wilderness should pass
away: for those scenes of solitude from which the hand of nature has
never been lifted, affect the mind with a more deep toned emotion than
aught which the hand of man has touched. Amid them the consequent
associations are of God the creator--they are his undefiled works, and
the mind is cast into the contemplation of eternal things.
[2. Mountains]
As
mountains are the most conspicuous objects in landscape, they will take
the precedence in what I may say on the elements of American scenery.
It
is true that in the eastern part of this continent there are no
mountains that vie in altitude with the snow-crowned Alps--that the
Alleghanies and the Catskills are in no point higher than five thousand
feet; but this is no inconsiderable height; Snowdon in Wales, and
Ben-Nevis in Scotland, are not more lofty; and in New Hampshire, which
has been called the Switzerland of the United States, the White
Mountains almost pierce the region of perpetual snow. The Alleghanies
are in general heavy in form; but the Catskills, although not broken
into abrupt angles like the most picturesque mountains of Italy, have
varied, undulating, and exceedingly beautiful outlines--they heave from
the valley of the Hudson like the subsiding billows of the ocean after
a storm.
American
mountains are generally clothed to the summit by dense forests, while
those of Europe are mostly bare, or merely tinted by grass or heath. It
may be that the mountains of Europe are on this account more
picturesque in form, and there is a grandeur in their nakedness; but in
the gorgeous garb of the American mountains there is more than an
equivalent; and when the woods "have put their glory on," as an
American poet has beautifully said, the purple heath and yellow furze
of Europe's mountains are in comparison but as the faint secondary
rainbow to the primal one.
But
in the mountains of New Hampshire there is a union of the picturesque,
the sublime, and the magnificent; there the bare peaks of granite,
broken and desolate, cradle the clouds; while the vallies and broad
bases of the mountains rest under the shadow of noble and varied
forests; and the traveller who passes the Sandwich range on his way to
the White Mountains, of which it is a spur, cannot but acknowledge,
that although in some regions of the globe nature has wrought on a more
stupendous scale, yet she has nowhere so completely married together
grandeur and loveliness--there he sees the sublime melting into the
beautiful, the savage tempered by the magnificent.
[3. Water]
I
will now speak of another component of scenery, without which every
landscape is defective--it is water. Like the eye in the human
countenance, it is a most expressive feature: in the unrippled lake,
which mirrors all surrounding objects, we have the expression of
tranquillity and peace--in the rapid stream, the headlong cataract,
that of turbulence and impetuosity.
[a. Lakes]
In
this great element of scenery, what land is so rich? I would not speak
of the Great Lakes, which are in fact inland seas--possessing some of
the attributes of the ocean, though destitute of its sublimity; but of
those smaller lakes, such as Lake George, Champlain, Winnipisiogee,
Otsego, Seneca, and a hundred others, that stud like gems the bosom of
this country. There is one delightful quality in nearly all these
lakes--the purity and transparency of the water. In speaking of scenery
it might seem unnecessary to mention this; but independent of the
pleasure that we all have in beholding pure water, it is a circumstance
which contributes greatly to the beauty of landscape; for the
reflections of surrounding objects, trees, mountains, sky, are most
perfect in the clearest water; and the most perfect is the most
beautiful.
I
would rather persuade you to visit the "Holy Lake," the beautiful
"Horican," than attempt to describe its scenery--to behold you rambling
on its storied shores, where its southern expanse is spread, begernmed
with isles of emerald, and curtained by green receding hills--or to see
you gliding over its bosom, where the steep and rugged mountains
approach from either side, shadowing with black precipices the
innumerable islets--some of which bearing a solitary tree, others a
group of two or three, or a "goodly company," seem to have been
sprinkled over the smiling deep in Nature's frolic hour. These scenes
are classic--History and Genius have hallowed them. War's shrill
clarion once waked the echoes from these now silent hills--the pen of a
living master has portrayed them in the pages of romance--and they are
worthy of the admiration of the enlightened and the graphic hand of
Genius.
Though
differing from Lake George, Winnipisiogee resembles it in multitudinous
and uncounted islands. Its mountains do not stoop to the water's edge,
but through varied screens of forest may be seen ascending the sky
softened by the blue haze of distance--on the one hand rise the
Gunstock Mountains; on the other the dark Ossipees, while above and far
beyond, rear the "cloud capt" peaks of the Sandwich and White Mountains.
I
will not fatigue with a vain attempt to describe the lakes that I have
named; but would turn your attention to those exquisitely beautiful
lakes that are so numerous in the Northern States, and particularly in
New Hampshire. In character they are truly and peculiarly American. I
know nothing in Europe which they resemble; the famous lakes of Albano
and Nemi, and the small and exceedingly picturesque lakes of Great
Britain may be compared in size, but are dissimilar in almost every
other respect. Embosomed in the primitive forest, and sometimes
overshadowed by huge mountains, they are the chosen places of
tranquillity; and when the deer issues from the surrounding woods to
drink the cool waters, he beholds his own image as in a polished
mirror,--the flight of the eagle can be seen in the lower sky; and if a
leaf falls, the circling undulations chase each other to the shores
unvexed by contending tides.
There
are two lakes of this description, situated in a wild mountain gorge
called the Franconia Notch, in New Hampshire. They lie within a few
hundred feet of each other, but are remarkable as having no
communication--one being the source of the wild Amonoosuck, the other
of the Pemigiwasset. Shut in by stupendous mountains which rest on
crags that tower more than a thousand feet above the water, whose
rugged brows and shadowy breaks are clothed by dark and tangled woods,
they have such an aspect of deep seclusion, of utter and unbroken
solitude, that, when standing on their brink a lonely traveller, I was
overwhelmed with an emotion of the sublime, such as I have rarely felt.
It was not that the jagged precipices were lofty, that the encircling
woods were of the dimmest shade, or that the waters were profoundly
deep; but that over all, rocks, wood, and water, brooded the spirit of
repose, and the silent energy of nature stirred the soul to its inmost
depths.
I would
not be understood that these lakes are always tranquil; but that
tranquillity is their great characteristic. There are times when they
take a far different expression; but in scenes like these the richest
chords are those struck by the gentler hand of nature.
[b. Waterfalls]
And
now I must turn to another of the beautifiers of the earth--the
Waterfall; which in the same object at once presents to the mind the
beautiful, but apparently incongruous idea, of fixedness and motion--a
single existence in which we perceive unceasing change and everlasting
duration. The waterfall may be called the voice of the landscape, for,
unlike the rocks and woods which utter sounds as the passive
instruments played on by the elements, the waterfall strikes its own
chords, and rocks and mountains re-echo in rich unison. And this is a
land abounding in cataracts; in these Northern States where shall we
turn and not find them? Have we not Kaaterskill, Trenton, the Flume,
the Genesee, stupendous Niagara, and a hundred others named and
nameless ones, whose exceeding beauty must be acknowledged when the
hand of taste shall point them out?
In
the Kaaterskill we have a stream, diminutive indeed, but throwing
itself headlong over a fearful precipice into a deep gorge of the
densely wooded mountains--and possessing a singular feature in the vast
arched cave that extends beneath and behind the cataract. At Trenton
there is a chain of waterfalls of remarkable beauty, where the foaming
waters, shadowed by steep cliffs, break over rocks of architectural
formation, and tangled and picturesque trees mantle abrupt precipices,
which it would be easy to imagine crumbling and "time disparting
towers."
And
Niagara! that wonder of the world!--where the sublime and beautiful are
bound together in an indissoluble chain. In gazing on it we feel as
though a great void had been filled in our minds--our conceptions
expand--we become a part of what we behold! At our feet the floods of a
thousand rivers are poured out--the contents of vast inland seas. In
its volume we conceive immensity; in its course, everlasting duration;
in its impetuosity, uncontrollable power. These are the elements of its
sublimity. Its beauty is garlanded around in the varied hues of the
water, in the spray that ascends the sky, and in that unrivalled bow
which forms a complete cincture round the unresting floods.
[c. Rivers]
The
river scenery of the United States is a rich and boundless theme. The
Hudson for natural magnificence is unsurpassed. What can be more
beautiful than the lake-like expanses of Tapaan and Haverstraw, as seen
from the rich orchards of the surrounding hills? hills that have a
legend, which has been so sweetly and admirably told that it shall not
perish but with the language of the land. What can be more imposing
than the precipitous Highlands; whose dark foundations have been rent
to make a passage for the deep-flowing river? And, ascending still,
where can be found scenes more enchanting? The lofty Catskills stand
afar off-the green hills gently rising from the flood, recede like
steps by which we may ascend to a great temple, whose pillars are those
everlasting hills, and whose dome is the blue boundless vault of heaven.
The
Rhine has its castled crags, its vine-clad hills, and ancient villages;
the Hudson has its wooded mountains, its rugged precipices, its green
undulating shores--a natural majesty, and an unbounded capacity for
improvement by art. Its shores are not besprinkled with venerated
ruins, or the palaces of princes; but there are flourishing towns, and
neat villas, and the hand of taste has already been at work. Without
any great stretch of the imagination we may anticipate the time when
the ample waters shall reflect temple, and tower, and dome, in every
variety of picturesqueness and magnificence.
In
the Connecticut we behold a river that differs widely from the Hudson.
Its sources are amid the wild mountains of New Hampshire; but it soon
breaks into a luxuriant valley, and flows for more than a hundred
miles, sometimes beneath the shadow of wooded hills, and sometimes
glancing through the green expanse of elm-besprinkled meadows. Whether
we see it at Haverhill, Northampton, or Hartford, it still possesses
that gentle aspect; and the imagination can scarcely conceive Arcadian
vales more lovely or more peaceful than the valley of the
Connecticut--its villages are rural places where trees overspread every
dwelling, and the fields upon its margin have the richest verdure.
Nor
ought the Ohio, the Susqueharmah, the Potomac, with their tributaries,
and a thousand others, be omitted in the rich list of the American
rivers--they are a glorious brotherhood; but volumes would be
insufficient for their description.
[4. Forests]
In
the Forest scenery of the United States we have that which occupies the
greatest space, and is not the least remarkable; being primitive, it
differs widely from the European. In the American forest we find trees
in every stage of vegetable life and decay--the slender sapling rises
in the shadow of the lofty tree, and the giant in his prime stands by
the hoary patriarch of the wood--on the ground lie prostrate decaying
ranks that once waved their verdant heads in the sun and wind. These
are circumstances productive of great variety and
picturesqueness--green umbrageous masses--lofty and scathed
trunks--contorted branches thrust athwart the sky--the mouldering dead
below, shrouded in moss of every hue and texture, from richer
combinations than can be found in the trimmed and planted grove. It is
true that the thinned and cultivated wood offers less obstruction to
the feet, and the trees throw out their branches more horizontally, and
are consequently more umbrageous when taken singly; but the true lover
of the picturesque is seldom fatigued--and trees that grow widely apart
are often heavy in form, and resemble each other too much for
picturesqueness. Trees are like men, differing widely in character; in
sheltered spots, or under the influence of culture, they show few
contrasting points; peculiarities are pruned and trained away, until
there is a general resemblance. But in exposed situations, wild and
uncultivated, battling with the elements and with one another for the
possession of a morsel of soil, or a favoring rock to which they may
cling--they exhibit striking peculiarities, and sometimes grand
originality.
For
variety, the American forest is unrivalled: in some districts are found
oaks, elms, birches, beeches, planes, pines, hemlocks, and many other
kinds of trees, commingled--clothing the hills with every tint of
green, and every variety of light and shade.
There
is a peculiarity observable in some mountainous regions, where trees of
a genus band together--there often may be seen a mountain whose foot is
clothed with deciduous trees, while on its brow is a sable crown of
pines; and sometimes belts of dark green encircle a mountain
horizontally, or are stretched in well-defined lines from the summit to
the base. The nature of the soil, or the courses of rivulets, are the
causes of this variety;--and it is a beautiful instance of the
exhaustlessness of nature; often where we should expect unvarying
monotony, we behold a charming diversity. Time will not permit me to
speak of the American forest trees individually; but I must notice the
elm, that paragon of beauty and shade; the maple, with its rainbow
hues; and the hemlock, the sublime of trees, which rises from the gloom
of the forest like a dark and ivy-mantled tower.
There
is one season when the American forest surpasses all the world in
gorgeousness--that is the autumnal;--then every hill and dale is riant
in the luxury of color--every hue is there, from the liveliest green to
deepest purple from the most golden yellow to the intensest crimson.
The artist looks despairingly upon the glowing landscape, and in the
old world his truest imitations of the American forest, at this season,
are called falsely bright, and scenes in Fairy Land.
[5. Sky]
The
sky will next demand our attention. The soul of all scenery, in it are
the fountains of light, and shade, and color. Whatever expression the
sky takes, the features of the landscape are affected in unison,
whether it be the serenity of the summer's blue, or the dark tumult of
the storm. It is the sky that makes the earth so lovely at sunrise, and
so splendid at sunset. In the one it breathes over the earth the
crystal-like ether, in the other liquid gold. The climate of a great
part of the United States is subject to great vicissitudes, and we
complain; but nature offers a compensation. These very vicissitudes are
the abundant sources of beauty--as we have the temperature of every
clime, so have we the skies--we have the blue unsearchable depths of
the northern sky--we have the upheaped thunder-clouds of the Torrid
Zone, fraught with gorgeousness and sublimity--we have the silver haze
of England, and the golden atmosphere of Italy. And if he who has
travelled and observed the skies of other climes will spend a few
months on the banks of the Hudson, he must be constrained to
acknowledge that for variety and magnificence American skies are
unsurpassed. Italian skies have been lauded by every tongue, and sung
by every poet, and who will deny their wonderful beauty? At sunset the
serene arch is filled with alchemy that transmutes mountains, and
streams, and temples, into living gold.
But
the American summer never passes without many sunsets that might vie
with the Italian, and many still more gorgeous--that seem peculiar to
this clime.
Look
at the heavens when the thunder shower has passed, and the sun stoops
behind the western mountains--there the low purple clouds hang in
festoons around the steeps--in the higher heaven are crimson bands
interwoven with feathers of gold, fit for the wings of angels--and
still above is spread that interminable field of ether, whose color is
too beautiful to have a name.
It
is not in the summer only that American skies are beautiful; for the
winter evening often comes robed in purple and gold, and in the
westering sun the iced groves glitter as beneath a shower of
diamonds--and through the twilight heaven innumerable stars shine with
a purer light than summer ever knows.
[III. The Want of Associations]
I
will now venture a few remarks on what has been considered a grand
defect in American scenery--the want of associations, such as arise
amid the scenes of the old world.
We
have many a spot as umbrageous as Vallombrosa, and as picturesque as
the solitudes of Vaucluse; but Milton and Petrarch have not hallowed
them by their footsteps and immortal verse. He who stands on Mont
Albano and looks down on ancient Rome, has his mind peopled with the
gigantic associations of the storied past; but he who stands on the
mounds of the West, the most venerable remains of American antiquity,
may experience the emotion of the sublime, but it is the sublimity of a
shoreless ocean un-islanded by the recorded deeds of man.
Yet
American scenes are not destitute of historical and legendary
associations--the great struggle for freedom has sanctified many a
spot, and many a mountain, stream, and rock has its legend, worthy of
poet's pen or the painter's pencil. But American associations are not
so much of the past as of the present and the future. Seated on a
pleasant knoll, look down into the bosom of that secluded valley, begin
with wooded hills--through those enamelled meadows and wide waving
fields of grain, a silver stream winds lingeringly along--here, seeking
the green shade of trees--there, glancing in the sunshine: on its banks
are rural dwellings shaded by elms and garlanded by flowers--from
yonder dark mass of foliage the village spire beams like a star. You
see no ruined tower to tell of outrage--no gorgeous temple to speak of
ostentation; but freedom's offspring--peace, security, and happiness,
dwell there, the spirits of the scene. On the margin of that gentle
river the village girls may ramble unmolested--and the glad school-boy,
with hook and line, pass his bright holiday--those neat dwellings,
unpretending to magnificence, are the abodes of plenty, virtue, and
refinement. And in looking over the yet uncultivated scene, the mind's
eye may see far into futurity. Where the wolf roams, the plough shall
glisten; on the gray crag shall rise temple and tower--mighty deeds
shall be done in the now pathless wilderness; and poets yet unborn
shall sanctify the soil.
[IV. Conclusion]
[1. The Destruction of Beautiful Landscapes]
It
was my intention to attempt a description of several districts
remarkable for their picturesqueness and truly American character; but
I fear to trespass longer on your time and patience. Yet I cannot but
express my sorrow that the beauty of such landscapes are quickly
passing away--the ravages of the axe are daily increasing--the most
noble scenes are made desolate, and oftentimes with a wantonness and
barbarism scarcely credible in a civilized nation. The wayside is
becoming shadeless, and another generation will behold spots, now rife
with beauty, desecrated by what is called improvement; which, as yet,
generally destroys Nature's beauty without substituting that of Art.
This is a regret rather than a complaint; such is the road society has
to travel; it may lead to refinement in the end, but the traveller who
sees the place of rest close at hand, dislikes the road that has so
many unnecessary windings.
[2. We Are Still in Eden]
I
will now conclude, in the hope that, though feebly urged, the
importance of cultivating a taste for scenery will not be forgotten.
Nature has spread for us a rich and delightful banquet. Shall we turn
from it? We are still in Eden; the wall that shuts us out of the garden
is our own ignorance and folly. We should not allow the poet's words to
be applicable to us--
Deep in rich pasture do thy flocks complain? Not so; but to their master is denied To share the sweet serene.
May
we at times turn from the ordinary pursuits of life to the pure
enjoyment of rural nature; which is in the soul like a fountain of cool
waters to the way-worn traveller; and let us
Learn
The laws by which the Eternal doth sublime And sanctify his works, that
we may see The hidden glory veiled from vulgar eyes.
This essay is obviously out of copyright and as it is reprinted on a geocities site which may get deleted I have copied it here for use with Some Landscapes.
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