Last
week a late evening thunderstorm with high winds and occasional
flashes of lightning rolled out of the high Smokies and down into
the little valley where we live several miles west of Bryson City.
I had sensed its arrival for 10 or so minutes. First, a cool breeze
kicked up that exposed the silvery undersides of leaves on trees
surrounding our house. Next, the light in the valley became yellowish-greenish,
almost luminescent. A few outsized raindrops began to splatter on
our tin roof and wooden decks. Finally, the rain poured in a torrent
that lasted for perhaps half an hour.
Given the dry weather we have been experiencing of late throughout
Western North Carolina and elsewhere, the rain was greatly appreciated,
of course. And as I listened I began to recall thunderstorms from
the past. When we first moved to Swain County in the early 1970s,
it seemed that every evening there arose a thunderstorm of the sort
described above. We were constantly propping up the corn stalks
and bean trellises in our summer gardens.
I was also reminded of the literary description of a high country
thunderstorm that took place long ago on Mt. Mitchell. Written by
Charles Dudley Warner, it initially appeared in the September 1885
issue of “The Atlantic Monthly” and was subsequently
included in one of his travel books titled On Horseback: A Tour
in Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee with Notes of Travel
in Mexico and California (Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1888).
Warner (1829-1900) was an essayist and novelist born in Plainfield,
Mass. He became the editor of “The Hartford Press” and
then of “Harper’s Magazine.” But he is best remembered
in American literary history for his close friendship with Mark
Twain. Warner was the first to remark that, “Everybody complains
about the weather, but nobody does anything about it” —
which was quoted by Twain in a lecture and often attributed to the
more famous writer.
Warner’s best book is perhaps the one titled My Summer in
a Garden (1870), but he also penned a number of travel books, several
of which are of enduring interest. The journey recorded in On Horseback
began at Abingdon in the far southwestern tip of Virginia. From
there, Warner and a friend he addressed as “The Professor”
journeyed down the valley of the Holston River into Tennessee and
then over into the mountains of North Carolina. Throughout the journey
they lodged mostly in private homes, where Warner recorded with
some skill (albeit with considerable regional arrogance) the lifestyles
observed.
From Boone, they traveled “through noble growths of oaks,
chestnuts, hemlocks, and rhododendrons” to Valle Crucis, which,
according to Warner, consisted of a “blacksmith shop and a
dirty, fly-blown store.” After making stops at Banner Elk,
Hanging Rock, Cranberry Forge, Roan Mountain, and Bakersville, they
arrived at Burnsville on their way to Asheville. Nearby, on the
western flank of Mt. Mitchell, they located the farmstead of Big
Tom Wilson, one of the most famous hunting guides and characters
of the late 19th century.
Wilson convinced them it was worthwhile to climb Mt. Mitchell,
the highest peak in eastern North America at 6,684 feet, so as to
obtain the view and visit the grave of Dr. Elisha Mitchell, who
died on the mountaintop in 1857 after a fall. This is the best part
of the book. Warner provided a vivid description of their ascent
via “steep hillsides and through gulies, over treacherous
sink-holes in the rocks, through quaggy places, heaps of brush,
and rotten logs.”
Elisha Mitchell’s final resting place seemed to Warner to
be “the most majestic, the most lonesome grave on earth”
— one from which “domes, peaks, ridges, endless and
countless, everywhere, some in shadow, some tipped with shafts of
sunlight, all wooded and green or black ... wild and terrible”
could be viewed in all directions.
As the party was readying to depart the mountaintop, a storm of
majestic proportions arose before their very eyes. Warner described
it in this manner:
“The clouds were gathering from various quarters and drifting
towards us. We could watch the process of thunderstorms and of tempests.
I have often noticed on other high mountains how the clouds, forming
like genii released from the earth, mount into the upper air, and
in masses of torn fragments of mist hurry across the sky as to a
rendezvous of witches. This was a different display. These clouds
came slowly sailing from the distant horizon, like ships on an aerial
voyage. Some were below us, some on our level; they were all in
well-defined, distinct masses, molten silver on deck, below trailing
rain, and attended on earth by gigantic shadows that moved with
them. This strange fleet of battle-ships, drifted by the shifting
currents, was manouvering for an engagement. One after another,
as they came into range about our peak of observation, they opened
fire. As sharp flashes of lightning darted from one to the other,
a jet of flames from one leaped across the interval and was buried
in the bosom of its adversary; and at every discharge the boom of
great guns echoed through the mountains. It was something more than
a royal salute to the tomb of the mortal at our feet, for the masses
of cloud were rent in the fray, at every discharge the rain was
precipitated in increasing torrents, and soon the vast bulks were
trailing torn fragments and wreaths of mists, like the shot-away
shrouds and sails of ships in battle. Gradually, from this long
range practice with single guns and exchange of broadsides, they
drifted into closer conflict, rushed together, and we lost sight
of the individual combatants in the general tumult of the aerial
war.”
There is, of course, considerable bombast in that description,
particularly in the over-extended analogy between clouds and battleships.
But there are also some apt and memorable images in the first part.
George Ellison wrote the biographical introductions for the
reissues of two Appalachian classics: Horace Kephart’s Our
Southern Highlanders and James Mooney’s History, Myths, and
Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees. In June 2005, a selection of his
Back Then columns was published by The History Press in Charleston
as Mountain Passages: Natural and Cultural History of Western North
Carolina and the Great Smoky Mountains. Readers can contact him
at P.O. Box 1262, Bryson City, N.C., 28713, or at info@georgeellison.com.