Letters of a Woman Homesteader eBook

Elinore Pruitt Stewart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 178 pages of information about Letters of a Woman Homesteader.

Letters of a Woman Homesteader eBook

Elinore Pruitt Stewart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 178 pages of information about Letters of a Woman Homesteader.
anxious to get a grouse and kept close watch, but was never quick enough.  Our progress was now slower and more difficult, because in places we could scarcely get through the forest.  Fallen trees were everywhere and we had to avoid the branches, which was powerful hard to do.  Besides, it was quite dusky among the trees long before night, but it was all so grand and awe-inspiring.  Occasionally there was an opening through which we could see the snowy peaks, seemingly just beyond us, toward which we were headed.  But when you get among such grandeur you get to feel how little you are and how foolish is human endeavor, except that which reunites us with the mighty force called God.  I was plumb uncomfortable, because all my own efforts have always been just to make the best of everything and to take things as they come.

At last we came to an open side of the mountain where the trees were scattered.  We were facing south and east, and the mountain we were on sheered away in a dangerous slant.  Beyond us still greater wooded mountains blocked the way, and in the canon between night had already fallen.  I began to get scary.  I could only think of bears and catamounts, so, as it was five o’clock, we decided to camp.  The trees were immense.  The lower branches came clear to the ground and grew so dense that any tree afforded a splendid shelter from the weather, but I was nervous and wanted one that would protect us against any possible attack.  At last we found one growing in a crevice of what seemed to be a sheer wall of rock.  Nothing could reach us on two sides, and in front two large trees had fallen so that I could make a log heap which would give us warmth and make us safe.  So with rising spirits I unpacked and prepared for the night.  I soon had a roaring fire up against the logs and, cutting away a few branches, let the heat into as snug a bedroom as any one could wish.  The pine needles made as soft a carpet as the wealthiest could afford.  Springs abound in the mountains, so water was plenty.  I staked “Jeems” quite near so that the firelight would frighten away any wild thing that tried to harm him.  Grass was very plentiful, so when he was made “comfy” I made our bed and fried our trout.  The branches had torn off the bag in which I had my bread, so it was lost in the forest, but who needs bread when they have good, mealy potatoes?  In a short time we were eating like Lent was just over.  We lost all the glory of the sunset except what we got by reflection, being on the side of the mountain we were, with the dense woods between.  Big sullen clouds kept drifting over and a wind got lost in the trees that kept them rocking and groaning in a horrid way.  But we were just as cozy as we could be and rest was as good as anything.

I wish you could once sleep on the kind of bed we enjoyed that night.  It was both soft and firm, with the clean, spicy smell of the pine.  The heat from our big fire came in and we were warm as toast.  It was so good to stretch out and rest.  I kept thinking how superior I was since I dared to take such an outing when so many poor women down in Denver were bent on making their twenty cents per hour in order that they could spare a quarter to go to the “show.”  I went to sleep with a powerfully self-satisfied feeling, but I awoke to realize that pride goeth before a fall.

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Letters of a Woman Homesteader from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.