Seeing the Big Trees
for the first time can be a transcendent experience. In the 19th century the words used to describe
them were often imbued with the spiritual and the sublime. This 1880 description
by a Santa Cruz correspondent for the Denver Tribune probably surpasses them
all … and its soaring words are great fun too!
Scott Peden Collection |
“As we stood and
viewed them we felt we could not, even in their presence, appreciate their vast
magnitude, their inexpressible greatness. You have to contemplate them for some time until your soul rises to the
awful sublimity of the occasion. It is
like viewing for the first time the mighty vastness of the deep, the
snow-capped summits of the range, or sweeping off the planetary system with a
telescope. It is more, for they seem to
humanity akin, with almost a touch of immortality. If, as the scientists claim, they are over
2,000 years old, their birth was contemporary with the palmy days of the Old
World. They waxed and grew strong with
the outcroppings of science that has since become fundamental law. They stood when Alexander marched to victory,
Caesar crossed the Rubicon, and Moses led the people out of the
wilderness. Their leafy banners
fluttered to the breeze before the coming of Christ and the dawning of the
Christian era. They bowed their heads in
responsive sympathy when all nature was convulsed with the tragedy of
Calvary. How many million times have
they seen the sun dip beyond the Pacific, and their aged tops have scanned the
distant horizon and nodded a welcome to the first dauntless explorer that touched
these shores, or waved their wind-rung branches in requiem over their
graves! If these dumb trunks could
speak, what tales they could reveal of earthquakes that have shook their
titanic forms, or tornadoes that have wrenched their massive limbs, and tidal
waves that have surged against their floor-defying bosoms! What a page in history could they unfold of
races that have sought the shelter of their friendly arms and passed away,
leaving no trace of their existence.”
Note: It was a common belief in the 19th century that the redwoods lived from 4,000-5,000 years. Today it is understood that the oldest redwoods live to just over 2,000 years.
Source: “Monarchs of the Forest – A Visit to Santa
Cruz and to the Big Trees,” St. Louis Globe-Democrat, August 18, 1880.
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