322 THE WEST SHORE. December; 1880 FROM THE DALLES TO PORTLAND. Ail Autumnal Sitlih. II V ADOUkTA AI.I.I.KN. From her home in the cast (lad Morning hastes, laden with light. Went ward hhf speeds. Riveis and lakes tremble wi'h delight at her ap proach. Valleys and hillslaugh. Moun tain hhish in her queenly presence mid the world glows will) majestic beauty. is it that it seems to have imbibed the spirit of the departing darkness. Good-bye now to The Dalles! Proud little cityl Rock-bound like the river whose brink you grace; like the river, too. in your restless striving, you re ttistluss rush onward, j We round a sharp jutting point and I glide on between the dull banks, with I misiy low-lying hills beyond ;now they I rise higher, and a broken hight reaches See 1 in the vista formed by the river-banks, the mystery of sunrise I Resting upon the water a bank of 1 violet ; and just above, soft fluffy clouds ! of the same hue, now blending with ! saffron and rose. Higher, a lake of j lambent light set with isles of amethyst. ! Just beyond, a glory, bright as youth dreams. Its boundary an ashen band I with border of palest azure flecked with 'glintings of fine scarlet. Even as I . ,wr.-..j.--.-' ?T'-"; - - r-r?. " Ui Lv--i--r Lr't"..,".' . iTi'Trar.. ' ,f. TIIK CAM AI1 S OK THK COl.l'MHIA KIVI'.R, The dmkness, enshrouding The Dalles, i now melting wny, and the forms of the near hilU, xTciidicular cliffs.J and blond black termors ate dimly 'discernible; while afar off, a ridge of hill gleam purple, not the pale etbriicl tint komrtimri seen at unsrt, or Inter'jn early day; but a hue many kliadrt decer than royal purple. j It U a color' w hich daylight and dmki nc with united cfloit produce; todec p with long black arm into the river. There arc daik frowning cliffs, stand ing in line like mighty mail-clad sen tinels waiting fur the day to release them horn duty. Great buttressed castles, with fl.it top, tower in majesty. On the light strctchca a broad plateau, and Wvond it. a i-nl.l ri,l.,...l i,:n Nearer are wpiaic masses of rock, and block of solid stone rise from the river itself. gaze the scene changes. The eastern sky is pale blue, an exquisitely delicate tint, with inland bays of pearl, em braced by shadowy gray. A fleecy mass of purest gold, drifting across, sends from its center a flood of light, giving to the sombre cloud a luminous glowing edge. While above, the dark curtains of the upper sky are fringed with golden fleece set with glistening gems. The water of the river flows