Mapping Indigenous Poetry of North America, 1830-1924

"Mount Shasta" by John Rollin Ridge

BEHOLD the dread Mt. Shasta, where it stands 
Imperial midst the lesser heights, and, like 
Some mighty unimpassioned mind, companionless 
And cold. The storms of Heaven may beat in wrath 
Against it, but it stands in unpolluted 
Grandeur still; and from the rolling mists upheaves 
Its tower of pride e'en purer than before. 
The wintry showers and white-winged tempests leave 
Their frozen tributes on its brow, and it 
Doth make of them an everlasting crown. 
Thus doth it, day by day and age by age, 
Defy each stroke of time: still rising highest 
Into Heaven!
Aspiring to the eagle's cloudless height, 
No human foot has stained its snowy side;
No human breath has dimmed the icy mirror which 
It holds unto the moon and stars and sov'reign sun. 
We may not grow familiar with the secrets 
Of its hoary top, whereon the Genius 
Of that mountain builds his glorious throne!
that mountain builds his throne 
Far lifted in the boundless blue, he doth 
Encircle, with his gaze supreme, the broad
Dominions of the West, which lie beneath 
His feet, in pictures of sublime repose
No artist ever drew. He sees the tall 
Gigantic hills arise in silentness
And peace, and in the long review of distance, 
Range themselves in order grand. He sees the sunlight
Play upon the golden streams which through the valleys 
Glide. He hears the music of the great and solemn sea,
And overlooks the huge old western wall 
To view the birth-place of undying Melody!

Itself all light, save when some loftiest cloud 
Doth for a while embrace its cold forbidding
Form, that monarch mountain casts its mighty
Shadow down upon the crownless peaks below,
That, like inferior minds to some great
Spirit, stand in strong contrasted littleness!
All through the long and Summery months of our
Most tranquil year, it points its icy shaft
On high, to catch the dazzling beams that fall
catch the dazzling beams that fall 
In showers of splendor round that crystal cone,
And roll in floods of far magnificence
Away from that lone, vast Reflector in
from that vast Reflector 
The dome of Heaven.
Still watchful of the fertile 
Vale and undulating plains below, the grass 
Grows greener in its shade, and sweeter bloom
The flowers. Strong purifier! From its snowy
Side the breezes cool are wafted to the "peaceful
Homes men,” who shelter at its feet, and love
To gaze upon its honored form, aye standing 
There the guarantee of health and happiness. 
Well might it win communities so blest 
To loftier feelings and to nobler thoughts—
The great material symbol of eternal 
Things! And well I ween, in after years, how 
In the middle of his furrowed track the plowman 
In some sultry hour will pause, and wiping
From his brow the dusty sweat, with reverence 
Gaze upon that hoary peak. The herdsman
Oft will rein his charger in the  plain, 
Into his inmost soul the calm sublimity;
And little children, on the green, shall
Cease their sport, and, turning to that mountain
Old, shall of their mother ask: "Who made it?"
And she shall answer, —"God!"

And well this Golden State shall thrive, if like 
Its own Mt. Shasta, Sovereign Law shall liſt
Itself in purer atmosphere—so high
That human feeling, human passion at its base 
Shall lie subdued; e'en pity's tears shall on
Its summit freeze; to warm it e'en the sunlight
Of deep sympathy shall fail: 
Its pure administration shall be like 
The snow immaculate upon that mountain's brow! 

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