Prev | Current Page 109 | Next

Bonner, Geraldine, 1870-1930

"The Emigrant Trail"


The islands that broke its languid currents were close grown with small
trees, riding low in the water like little ships freighted deep with
greenery. Toward evening, looking to the West, with the dazzle of the
sun on the water, they were a fairy fleet drifting on the silver tide
of dreams.
The wide, slow stream ran in the middle of a wide, flat valley. Then
came a line of broken hills, yellowish and sandy, cleft apart by sharp
indentations, and dry, winding arroyos, down which the buffalo trooped,
thirsty, to the river. When the sun sloped westward, shadows lay clear
in the hollows, violet and amethyst and sapphire blue, transparent
washes of color as pure as the rays of the prism. The hills rolled
back in a turbulence of cone and bluff and then subsided, fell away as
if all disturbance must cease before the infinite, subduing calm of The
Great Plains.
Magic words, invoking the romance of the unconquered West, of the
earth's virgin spaces, of the buffalo and the Indian. In their idle
silence, treeless, waterless, clothed as with a dry pale hair with the
feathered yellow grasses, they looked as if the monstrous creatures of
dead epochs might still haunt them, might still sun their horny sides
among the sand hills, and wallow in the shallows of the river.


Pages:
97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121
906 niezarejestrowana strona brak hosta 906 no host