Post 03039
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Lovely wild-flower gardens occupy many of the openings in this torn and bristling edge of the forest. In places acres are crowded so closely with thrifty, brilliant bloom that one hesitates to walk through and trample the flowers. Here the columbine, the paintbrush, the monument-plant, and scores of other bright blossoms cheer the wild frontier.
Rarely are strangers in the mountains thoroughly aroused. They need time or explanation in order to comprehend or appreciate the larger scenes, though they do, of course, have periodic outbursts in adjectives. But at timber-line the monumental scene at once has the attention, and no explanation is needed. Timber-line tells its own stirring story of frontier experience by a forest of powerful and eloquent tree statues and bold, battered, and far-extending figures in relief.
Only a few of the many young people whom I have guided to timber-line have failed to feel the significance of the scene, but upon one party fresh from college the eloquent pioneer spirit of the place made no impression, and they talked glibly and cynically of these faithful trees with such expressions as “A DorĂ© garden!” “Ill-shapen fiends!” “How foolish to live here!” and “Criminal classes!” More appreciative was the little eight-year-old girl whose ascent of Long’s Peak I have told of in “Wild Life on the Rockies.” She paid the trees at timber-line as simple and as worthy a tribute as I have ever heard them receive: “What brave little trees to stay up here where they have to stand all the time with their feet in the snow!”