The Klickitat County Agriculturist, Goldendale, WA., September 1, 1900, page 3
AT TROUT LAKE
Enchanting Scenes at this Noted Summer Resort
Mrs. Inez Filloon, well known in Goldendale, now of The
Dalles, has the following fine descriptive article of Trout Lake in a recent
issue of the Mountaineer of that city. Mrs. Filloon had spent two weeks at
this resort - as she does every season:
Trout Lake, Aug. 11. - It is summertime and the lazy,
dreamy laughter is in the throat of the brook, and all around Mt. Adams the
clouds lay piled like so many big pearls; the sweet pale green of the meadows,
dotted with white daisies and blue brook-lime, melts into the shadows of
the great-green willows, the tall spears of the forest blend in with the
azure above them, the goldenrod nods its yellow plumes, and the purple aster
grows in great masses at its feet, making a poem in purple and gold, and
we know his summer, merry, jolly summer.
This afternoon we walked around the upper part of Trout
Lake, following the red road around the base of the hills, and noted the
delicate, feathery ferns that cover the ugly logs and unsightly places. The
thimble berries with its large leaves that surmount its brilliant, delicious
red berries, the pink fire weed, raising phoenix like from the ashes of a
"forest primeval," and wild black berry vines clambering over blackened logs,
their berries now ripening and being carried away to some hidden retreat
by the saucy chipmunk with his chops just as full as they can hold of his
berry gathering; an old fence built long ago and fast falling into decay
is made a "thing of beauty" by the tall, yellow spikes of the goldenrod,
spoken of before, and it catches the first kiss of the sun as he peeps over
the purple hills in the east. Everywhere in our rambles we come across great
masses of the goldenrod and purple aster in close communion. Did you ever
notice that in nature's garden purple and gold flowers are among the first
in spring and the last in the fall?
The great creamy flowers of the ocean spray nod to us
as we pass by, and again the blue bells, identical with the blue bell of
the bonny Scotland, is here, in the half shady places, modest and unobtrusive,
bending gracefully. In the real early morning, when over half the world is
asleep, the fairies are busy with the work of nature, and if you get up early,
just before the sun is wide awake, and after the moonlight is almost all
gone, when the world is bathed in dew, the mountain world, when the odor
of the pine, fir and hemlock are everywhere, you will hear the blue bells
ringing the sweetest chimes echoing across lake and meadow, and if you will
look under the thimble berries leaves near you will see the fairies dancing
to the music of the bells, clad in gowns of spider webs trimmed with dew
pearls and you wonder that you do not get up early and learn from nature's
book instead of staying in bed till all the poetry of the morning is absorbed
by the sun.
Here it is a little marshy place, and filled by a large
leafed plant, vulgarly called "skunk cabbage," and on the tiny bank are sword
and lemon ferns, and as we are resting on the little bridge that crosses
the marsh, a little bird, then another and another still, comes down to drink,
and then to bathe. We are quite still, so that the little fellows may not
be startled, then when they have bathed and refreshed themselves, they fly
away not knowing how very near to them had been the human folk with great
big rifles, but who would not hurt them for the world. We walked on and came
to a deserted ranch where the thistle flourish in a rosy purple that fairly
glows out of its dusty grey by the road side, but the sun sinks into the
golden west and leaves the world in darkness and to me, so that when we walk
back over the long road and through the sweet clover meadow, we see the camp
fire glowing, throwing its reflection in the water of the creek that flows
past "Kamp Kontent," and we hear the dip of the oar on the lake and the notes
of the mallard who has been to "lodge," the crickets and katydid in making
their own music in the pine woods across the meadow.
The Klickitat County Agriculturist, Goldendale, WA., September 8, 1900, page 3
ECHOES FROM TROUT LAKE
Nature in all its Moods and Fancies - Ocean and Mountain Contrasted
By Mrs. Inez Filloon
(Continued from last week)
Trout Lake, Aug. 11, 1900
Do I love the mountains better than I do the ocean? This
question reminds me of a similar one asked me when I was a child, as to which
I loved the better, father or mother. I loved both; one just the same as
the other. When at the seaside I go down the long wet stretch of sandy beach
at 4 a.m. and hear the tide sobbing as it retreats; the dull, distant boom
of the breakers is born in on the breeze as it comes toward the land. * *
* * I love the ocean -- its powers, its vastness, its gentle moods, its wild
temper when it comes in and carries us on its mane, and brings us back again;
when it takes us up, tosses us about as boy does a ball, and then when we
are done with the surf we feel like a new being, and we vow again our love
for the mighty deep and drink in the sea air in deep, long drawn breaths,
with head up-lifted and shoulders thrown back, and go to breakfast ready
for anything edible, and telling our hostess we have the appetite of hungry
wolves. We do not need to tell her in words - she knows it for we leave on
the table only dishes and silverware!
Then in our rambles we see the rhododendron bells and
peep down into their pink depths. * * * * We look out across the miles of
salt water and see the smoke from some freight or passenger vessel going
to San Francisco or Portland. We climb the white sand cliffs and weave stories
from the fabric of our brains about the people who use to inhabited this
[Newport] country; the Alseas as the entertained the tribes of other nations;
the pale-faces also who do now entertainment at this seaside in a different,
yet some-what the same way - only the modern ways are somehow improved. Feasting,
music, and conversation, boating on the bay and long rides in well-filled
hampers of luncheon fill the fleeting days now, -- where the red man and
dusty maiden once feasted; and for music had the tom tom, and the weird songs
of the maidens; and boat racing in canoes; and long rides on "cuitans." I
wonder if they, too, love the ocean?
We climb the hills to see the sun as he flings back to
us his last lingering good-bye; and then the god of day bathes the Pacific
in silver and gold, sprinkled with diamonds, and over the whole he throws
a veil of rose and purple; every wave gleaming, flashing and dancing in the
sunlight. . . . Then the golden orb goes down lower and lower over the horizon
to awaken another world; and then the brilliancy fades only to bring on the
hushed tones of light - the grey only found in an ocean sky. -- But these
somber tones are not for long; for on looking back toward the bay the silver
moon, round and full, is creeping up through and over the tall pines; and
then he throws his reflection in the blue waters of the bay, making a scene
long to be remembered. And then the silver track is seen upon the ocean;
and we wonder which is the more beautiful, sunrise or moonrise upon an old
ocean! Another question hard for me to answer - for I love it all.
Nature in all its moods and fancies is grand, and appeals
to me when even in the dull-dry, hot desert. There is some-thing beautiful
to me in the grey-yellow sagebrush, and the yellow stretch of dry, hot sands
melts into the quivering horizon to meet the blue sky above.
And the mountains! The grand old hills and more imposing
peaks! Of course I love them, too! Who so dull of all Nature that could not
find a thrill of admiration and love for the Creator above, who made the
everlasting hills! Even if we could not see, we could hear the winds sighing
and moaning through the trees; we could hear the rustle of the leaves as
the gentle breezes blow; we could hear the wooddoves cooing -"there'll be
plenty of tomorrow's my love, my love; there's only one today my love, my
love"; we could listen to the sweetest music ever heard - as we sit beside
the purling brook with a song in his throat as it goes tumbling on over gray
stones, past ferns, and the blue bells. And even if we could not see the
foam and jewels of the waterfall we could hear its music; we could hear the
tinkle of the bells borne by Moll and Bess, as they stand knee deep in the
grass and tender rushes, or when they come up the dusky lanes at milking
time; and we could hear the black crows "caw! caw! caw!" from the tops of
the willows where their nests are; we could hear the hum of the bees in the
red clover, and the chirp of the katydid and the cricket at sundown; and
the deep tones of a watchdog would be borne to us on the warm evening air
coming across the meadows from some farm. But when we can both hear and see
all the beauties of the mountains, when we can see the sunset glow on the
snow mountains and the purple evening tints on the deep forests and in the
canyons we have much to be thankful for; and we have even more to thank the
Giver of all of this beauty, for if we really feel a deep love for Nature
down in our hearts - when we study Nature - then we have made a good foundation
on which to build our lives and to be of more help to those around us.
I do not care for dissecting flowers and plants -- but
take them as they come with their perfume and color and in masses. So it
is with the ocean and mountain. Not why they are, but as they are, with the
message of the winds, the murmur of the ocean, the rosy glow in the east
at dawn, and the woods with their mysterious silences. --- I can only answer
the question at the beginning by saying, -- find anything in nature I do
not love.
INEZ FILLOON.
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© Jeffrey L. Elmer