Essay
on American Scenery
American
Monthly Magazine 1 (January 1836)
Thomas Cole
[I. Introduction]
The essay, which
is here offered, is a mere sketch of an almost illimitable subject--American
Scenery; and in selecting the theme the writer placed more confidence in its
overflowing richness, than in his own capacity for treating it in a manner
worthy of its vastness and importance.
It is a subject
that to every American ought to be of surpassing interest; for, whether he
beholds the Hudson mingling waters with the Atlantic--explores the central
wilds of this vast continent, or stands on the margin of the distant Oregon, he
is still in the midst of American scenery--it is his own land; its beauty, its
magnificence, its sublimity--all are his; and how undeserving of such a
birthright, if he can turn towards it an unobserving eye, an unaffected heart!
Before entering
into the proposed subject, in which I shall treat more particularly of the
scenery of the Northern and Eastern States, I shall be excused for saying a few
words on the advantages of cultivating a taste for scenery, and for exclaiming
against the apathy with which the beauties of external nature are regarded by
the great mass, even of our refined community.
[1. The
Contemplation of Scenery as a Source of Delight and Improvement]
It is generally
admitted that the liberal arts tend to soften our manners; but they do
more--they carry with them the power to mend our hearts.
Poetry and
Painting sublime and purify thought, by grasping the past, the present, and the
future--they give the mind a foretaste of its immortality, and thus prepare it
for performing an exalted part amid the realities of life. And rural nature is
full of the same quickening spirit--it is, in fact, the exhaustless mine from
which the poet and the painter have brought such wondrous treasures--an
unfailing fountain of intellectual enjoyment, where all may drink, and be
awakened to a deeper feeling of the works of genius, and a keener perception of
the beauty of our existence. For those whose days are all consumed in the low
pursuits of avarice, or the gaudy frivolities of fashion, unobservant of
nature's loveliness, are unconscious of the harmony of creation--
Heaven's roof to
them Is but a painted ceiling hung with lamps; No
more--that lights them to their purposes-- They wander 'loose about;' they
nothing see, Themselves except, and creatures like themselves, Short lived,
short sighted.
What to them is
the page of the poet where he describes or personifies the skies, the
mountains, or the streams, if those objects themselves have never awakened
observation or excited pleasure? What to them is the wild Salvator
Rosa, or the aerial Claude Lorrain?
There is in the
human mind an almost inseparable connection between the beautiful and the good,
so that if we contemplate the one the other seems present; and an excellent
author has said, "it is difficult to look at any objects with
pleasure--unless where it arises from brutal and tumultuous emotions--without
feeling that disposition of mind which tends towards kindness and benevolence;
and surely, whatever creates such a disposition, by increasing our pleasures
and enjoyments, cannot be too much cultivated."
It would seem
unnecessary to those who can see and feel, for me to expatiate on the
loveliness of verdant fields, the sublimity of lofty mountains, or the varied
magnificence of the sky; but that the number of those who seek enjoyment in
such sources is comparatively small. From the indifference with which the multitude regard the beauties of nature, it might be
inferred that she had been unnecessarily lavish in adorning this world for
beings who take no pleasure in its adornment. Who in grovelling
pursuits forget their glorious heritage. Why was the
earth made so beautiful, or the sun so clad in glory at his rising and setting,
when all might be unrobed of beauty without affecting the insensate multitude,
so they can be "lighted to their purposes?"
It has not been in
vain--the good, the enlightened of all ages and nations, have found pleasure
and consolation in the beauty of the rural earth. Prophets of old retired into
the solitudes of nature to wait the inspiration of heaven. It was on
He who looks on
nature with a "loving eye," cannot move from his dwelling without the
salutation of beauty; even in the city the deep blue sky and the drifting
clouds appeal to him. And if to escape its turmoil--if only to obtain a free
horizon, land and water in the play of light and shadow yields delight--let him
be transported to those favored regions, where the features of the earth are more
varied, or yet add the sunset, that wreath of glory daily bound around the
world, and he, indeed, drinks from pleasure's purest cup. The delight such a
man experiences is not merely sensual, or selfish, that passes with the
occasion leaving no trace behind; but in gazing on the pure creations of the
Almighty, he feels a calm religious tone steal through his mind, and when he
has turned to mingle with his fellow men, the chords which have been struck in
that sweet communion cease not to vibrate.
In what has been
said I have alluded to wild and uncultivated scenery; but the cultivated must
not be forgotten, for it is still more important to man in his social
capacity--necessarily bringing him in contact with the cultured; it encompasses
our homes, and, though devoid of the stern sublimity of the wild, its quieter
spirit steals tenderly into our bosoms mingled with a thousand domestic
affections and heart-touching associations--human hands have wrought, and human
deeds hallowed all around.
And it is here
that taste, which is the perception of the beautiful, and the knowledge of the
principles on which nature works, can be applied, and our dwelling-places made
fitting for refined and intellectual beings.
[2. The Advantages
of Cultivating a Taste for Scenery]
If, then, it is
indeed true that the contemplation of scenery can be so abundant a source of
delight and improvement, a taste for it is certainly worthy of particular
cultivation; for the capacity for enjoyment increases with the knowledge of the
true means of obtaining it.
In this age, when
a meager utilitarianism seems ready to absorb every feeling and sentiment, and
what is sometimes called improvement in its march makes us fear that the bright
and tender flowers of the imagination shall all be crushed beneath its iron
tramp, it would be well to cultivate the oasis that yet remains to us, and thus
preserve the germs of a future and a purer system. And now, when the sway of
fashion is extending widely over society--poisoning the healthful streams of
true refinement, and turning men from the love of simplicity and beauty, to a
senseless idolatry of their own follies--to lead them gently into the pleasant
paths of Taste would be an object worthy of the highest efforts of genius and
benevolence. The spirit of our society is to contrive but not to enjoy--toiling
to produce more toil-accumulating in order to aggrandize. The pleasures of the
imagination, among which the love of scenery holds a conspicuous place, will
alone temper the harshness of such a state; and, like the atmosphere that
softens the most rugged forms of the landscape, cast a veil of tender beauty
over the asperities of life.
Did our limits
permit I would endeavor more fully to show how necessary to the complete
appreciation of the Fine Arts is the study of scenery, and how conducive to our
happiness and well-being is that study and those arts; but I must now proceed
to the proposed subject of this essay--American Scenery!
[II. The Elements
of American Scenery]
There are those
who through ignorance or prejudice strive to maintain that American scenery
possesses little that is interesting or truly beautiful--that it is rude
without picturesqueness, and monotonous without
sublimity--that being destitute of those vestiges of antiquity, whose associations
so strongly affect the mind, it may not be compared with European scenery. But
from whom do these opinions come? From those who have read of European scenery,
of Grecian mountains, and Italian skies, and never troubled themselves to look
at their own; and from those travelled ones whose
eyes were never opened to the beauties of nature until they beheld foreign
lands, and when those lands faded from the sight were again closed and forever;
disdaining to destroy their trans-atlantic
impressions by the observation of the less fashionable and unfamed
American scenery. Let such persons shut themselves up in their narrow shell of
prejudice--I hope they are few,--and the community increasing in intelligence,
will know better how to appreciate the treasures of their own country.
I am by no means
desirous of lessening in your estimation the glorious scenes of the old
world--that ground which has been the great theater of human events--those
mountains, woods, and streams, made sacred in our minds by heroic deeds and
immortal song--over which time and genius have suspended an imperishable halo.
No! But I would have it remembered that nature has shed over this land beauty
and magnificence, and although the character of its scenery may differ from the
old world's, yet inferiority must not therefore be inferred; for though
American scenery is destitute of many of those circumstances that give value to
the European, still it has features, and glorious ones, unknown to Europe.
[1. Wildness]
A very few
generations have passed away since this vast tract of the American continent,
now the United States, rested in the shadow of primeval forests, whose gloom
was peopled by savage beasts, and scarcely less savage men; or lay in those
wide grassy plains called prairies--
The Gardens of the
Desert, these The unshorn fields, boundless and
beautiful.
And, although an
enlightened and increasing people have broken in upon the solitude, and with
activity and power wrought changes that seem magical, yet the most distinctive,
and perhaps the most impressive, characteristic of American scenery is its
wildness.
It is the most
distinctive, because in civilized Europe the primitive features of scenery have
long since been destroyed or modified--the extensive forests that once
overshadowed a great part of it have been felled--rugged mountains have been
smoothed, and impetuous rivers turned from their courses to accommodate the
tastes and necessities of a dense population--the once tangled wood is now a
grassy lawn; the turbulent brook a navigable stream--crags that could not be
removed have been crowned with towers, and the rudest valleys tamed by the
plough.
And to this
cultivated state our western world is fast approaching; but nature is still
predominant, and there are those who regret that with the improvements of
cultivation the sublimity of the wilderness should pass away: for those scenes
of solitude from which the hand of nature has never been lifted, affect the
mind with a more deep toned emotion than aught which the hand of man has touched.
Amid them the consequent associations are of God the creator--they are his
undefiled works, and the mind is cast into the contemplation of eternal things.
[2. Mountains]
As mountains are
the most conspicuous objects in landscape, they will take the precedence in
what I may say on the elements of American scenery.
It is true that in
the eastern part of this continent there are no mountains that vie in altitude
with the snow-crowned Alps--that the Alleghanies and
the Catskills are in no point higher than five thousand feet; but this is no
inconsiderable height; Snowdon in Wales, and
Ben-Nevis in Scotland, are not more lofty; and in New Hampshire, which has been
called the Switzerland of the United States, the White Mountains almost pierce
the region of perpetual snow. The Alleghanies are in
general heavy in form; but the Catskills, although not broken into abrupt
angles like the most picturesque mountains of
…
But in the
mountains of New Hampshire there is a union of the picturesque, the sublime,
and the magnificent; there the bare peaks of granite, broken and desolate,
cradle the clouds; while the vallies and broad bases
of the mountains rest under the shadow of noble and varied forests; and the traveller who passes the Sandwich range on his way to the
White Mountains, of which it is a spur, cannot but acknowledge, that although
in some regions of the globe nature has wrought on a more stupendous scale, yet
she has nowhere so completely married together grandeur and loveliness--there
he sees the sublime melting into the beautiful, the savage tempered by the
magnificent.
[3. Water]
I will now speak
of another component of scenery, without which every landscape is defective--it
is water. Like the eye in the human countenance, it is a most expressive
feature: in the unrippled lake, which mirrors all
surrounding objects, we have the expression of tranquillity
and peace--in the rapid stream, the headlong cataract, that of turbulence and
impetuosity.
[a. Lakes]
In this great
element of scenery, what land is so rich? I would not speak of the
…
I would not be
understood that these lakes are always tranquil; but that tranquillity
is their great characteristic. There are times when they take a far different
expression; but in scenes like these the richest chords are those struck by the
gentler hand of nature.
[b. Waterfalls]
And now I must
turn to another of the beautifiers of the earth--the Waterfall; which in the
same object at once presents to the mind the beautiful, but apparently
incongruous idea, of fixedness and motion--a single existence in which we
perceive unceasing change and everlasting duration. The waterfall may be called
the voice of the landscape, for, unlike the rocks and woods which utter sounds
as the passive instruments played on by the elements, the waterfall strikes its
own chords, and rocks and mountains re-echo in rich unison. And this is a land
abounding in cataracts; in these Northern States where shall we turn and not
find them? Have we not Kaaterskill,
In the Kaaterskill we have a stream, diminutive indeed, but
throwing itself headlong over a fearful precipice into a deep gorge of the
densely wooded mountains--and possessing a singular feature in the vast arched
cave that extends beneath and behind the cataract. At
And
[c. Rivers]
The river scenery of
the
The
…
[4. Forests]
In the
For variety, the
American forest is unrivalled: in some districts are found oaks, elms, birches,
beeches, planes, pines, hemlocks, and many other kinds of trees,
commingled--clothing the hills with every tint of green, and every variety of
light and shade.
..
There is one
season when the American forest surpasses all the world in gorgeousness--that
is the autumnal;--then every hill and dale is riant
in the luxury of color--every hue is there, from the liveliest green to deepest
purple from the most golden yellow to the intensest
crimson. The artist looks despairingly upon the glowing landscape, and in the
old world his truest imitations of the American forest, at this season, are
called falsely bright, and scenes in
[5. Sky]
The sky will next
demand our attention. The soul of all scenery, in it are
the fountains of light, and shade, and color. Whatever expression the sky
takes, the features of the landscape are affected in unison, whether it be the serenity of the summer's blue, or the dark tumult of
the storm. It is the sky that makes the earth so lovely at sunrise,
and so splendid at sunset. In the one it breathes over the earth the
crystal-like ether, in the other liquid gold. The climate of a great part of
the
But the American
summer never passes without many sunsets that might vie with the Italian, and
many still more gorgeous--that seem peculiar to this clime.
…
[III. The Want of
Associations]
I will now venture
a few remarks on what has been considered a grand defect in American
scenery--the want of associations, such as arise amid the scenes of the old
world.
We have many a
spot as umbrageous as Vallombrosa, and as picturesque as the solitudes of Vaucluse;
but Milton and Petrarch have not hallowed them by
their footsteps and immortal verse. He who stands on Mont Albano
and looks down on ancient Rome, has his mind peopled with the gigantic associations
of the storied past; but he who stands on the mounds of the West, the most
venerable remains of American antiquity, may experience the emotion of the
sublime, but it is the sublimity of a shoreless ocean
un-islanded by the recorded deeds of man.
Yet American
scenes are not destitute of historical and legendary associations--the great
struggle for freedom has sanctified many a spot, and many a mountain, stream,
and rock has its legend, worthy of poet's pen or the painter's pencil. But
American associations are not so much of the past as of the present and the
future. Seated on a pleasant knoll, look down into the bosom of that secluded
valley, begin with wooded hills--through those enamelled
meadows and wide waving fields of grain, a silver stream winds lingeringly
along--here, seeking the green shade of trees--there, glancing in the sunshine:
on its banks are rural dwellings shaded by elms and garlanded by flowers--from
yonder dark mass of foliage the village spire beams like a star. You see no
ruined tower to tell of outrage--no gorgeous temple to speak of ostentation;
but freedom's offspring--peace, security, and happiness, dwell there, the
spirits of the scene. On the margin of that gentle river the village girls may
ramble unmolested--and the glad school-boy, with hook and line, pass his bright
holiday--those neat dwellings, unpretending to magnificence, are the abodes of
plenty, virtue, and refinement. And in looking over the yet uncultivated scene,
the mind's eye may see far into futurity. Where the wolf roams, the plough
shall glisten; on the gray crag shall rise temple and tower--mighty deeds shall
be done in the now pathless wilderness; and poets yet unborn shall sanctify the
soil.
[IV. Conclusion]
[1. The
Destruction of Beautiful Landscapes]
It was my
intention to attempt a description of several districts remarkable for their picturesqueness and truly American character; but I fear to
trespass longer on your time and patience. Yet I cannot but express my sorrow
that the beauty of such landscapes are quickly passing away--the ravages of the
axe are daily increasing--the most noble scenes are made desolate, and
oftentimes with a wantonness and barbarism scarcely credible in a civilized
nation. The wayside is becoming shadeless, and
another generation will behold spots, now rife with beauty, desecrated by what
is called improvement; which, as yet, generally destroys Nature's beauty
without substituting that of Art. This is a regret rather than a complaint;
such is the road society has to travel; it may lead to refinement in the end,
but the traveller who sees the place of rest close at
hand, dislikes the road that has so many unnecessary windings.
[2. We Are Still
in
I will now
conclude, in the hope that, though feebly urged, the importance of cultivating
a taste for scenery will not be forgotten. Nature has spread for us a rich and
delightful banquet. Shall we turn from it? We are still in
Deep in rich
pasture do thy flocks complain? Not so; but to their master is denied To share the sweet serene.
May we at times
turn from the ordinary pursuits of life to the pure enjoyment of rural nature;
which is in the soul like a fountain of cool waters to the way-worn traveller; and let us
Learn The laws by which the Eternal doth sublime And sanctify his
works, that we may see The hidden glory veiled from vulgar eyes.
MLA Citation:
Cole, Thomas. "Essay on American Scenery". American Monthly
Magazine 1, (January 1836) 1-12