summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/12298-h
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to '12298-h')
-rw-r--r--12298-h/12298-h.htm803
1 files changed, 803 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/12298-h/12298-h.htm b/12298-h/12298-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..be1a71b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/12298-h/12298-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,803 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Grand Cañon of the Colorado, by John Muir</title>
+
+<style type="text/css">
+
+body { margin-left: 20%;
+ margin-right: 20%;
+ text-align: justify; }
+
+h1, h2, h3, h4, h5 {text-align: center; font-style: normal; font-weight:
+normal; line-height: 1.5; margin-top: .5em; margin-bottom: .5em;}
+
+h1 {font-size: 300%;
+ margin-top: 0.6em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.6em;
+ letter-spacing: 0.12em;
+ word-spacing: 0.2em;
+ text-indent: 0em;}
+h2 {font-size: 150%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em;}
+h3 {font-size: 130%; margin-top: 1em;}
+h4 {font-size: 120%;}
+h5 {font-size: 110%;}
+
+.no-break {page-break-before: avoid;} /* for epubs */
+
+div.chapter {page-break-before: always; margin-top: 4em;}
+
+hr {width: 80%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;}
+
+p {text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: 0.25em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+
+a:link {color:blue; text-decoration:none}
+a:visited {color:blue; text-decoration:none}
+a:hover {color:red}
+
+</style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12298 ***</div>
+
+<h1>THE GRAND CAÑON OF THE COLORADO</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by John Muir</h2>
+
+<h3>1902</h3>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p>
+Happy nowadays is the tourist, with earth&rsquo;s wonders, new and old, spread
+invitingly open before him, and a host of able workers as his slaves making
+everything easy, padding plush about him, grading roads for him, boring
+tunnels, moving hills out of his way, eager, like the devil, to show him all
+the kingdoms of the world and their glory and foolishness, spiritualizing
+travel for him with lightning and steam, abolishing space and time and almost
+everything else. Little children and tender, pulpy people, as well as
+storm-seasoned explorers, may now go almost everywhere in smooth comfort, cross
+oceans and deserts scarce accessible to fishes and birds, and, dragged by steel
+horses, go up high mountains, riding gloriously beneath starry showers of
+sparks, ascending like Elijah in a whirlwind and chariot of fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+First of the wonders of the great West to be brought within reach of the
+tourist were the Yosemite and the Big Trees, on the completion of the first
+transcontinental railway; next came the Yellowstone and icy Alaska, by the
+Northern roads; and last the Grand Cañon of the Colorado, which, naturally the
+hardest to reach, has now become, by a branch of the Santa Fé, the most
+accessible of all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of course with this wonderful extension of steel ways through our wilderness
+there is loss as well as gain. Nearly all railroads are bordered by belts of
+desolation. The finest wilderness perishes as if stricken with pestilence. Bird
+and beast people, if not the dryads, are frightened from the groves. Too often
+the groves also vanish, leaving nothing but ashes. Fortunately, nature has a
+few big places beyond man&rsquo;s power to spoil&mdash;the ocean, the two icy
+ends of the globe, and the Grand Cañon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I first heard of the Santa Fé trains running to the edge of the Grand
+Cañon of Arizona, I was troubled with thoughts of the disenchantment likely to
+follow. But last winter, when I saw those trains crawling along through the
+pines of the Cocanini Forest and close up to the brink of the chasm at Bright
+Angel, I was glad to discover that in the presence of such stupendous scenery
+they are nothing. The locomotives and trains are mere beetles and caterpillars,
+and the noise they make is as little disturbing as the hooting of an owl in the
+lonely woods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a dry, hot, monotonous forested plateau, seemingly boundless, you come
+suddenly and without warning upon the abrupt edge of a gigantic sunken
+landscape of the wildest, most multitudinous features, and those features,
+sharp and angular, are made out of flat beds of limestone and sandstone forming
+a spiry, jagged, gloriously colored mountain-range countersunk in a level gray
+plain. It is a hard job to sketch it even in scrawniest outline; and try as I
+may, not in the least sparing myself, I cannot tell the hundredth part of the
+wonders of its features&mdash;the side-cañons, gorges, alcoves, cloisters, and
+amphitheaters of vast sweep and depth, carved in its magnificent walls; the
+throng of great architectural rocks it contains resembling castles, cathedrals,
+temples, and palaces, towered and spired and painted, some of them nearly a
+mile high, yet beneath one&rsquo;s feet. All this, however, is less difficult
+than to give any idea of the impression of wild, primeval beauty and power one
+receives in merely gazing from its brink. The view down the gulf of color and
+over the rim of its wonderful wall, more than any other view I know, leads us
+to think of our earth as a star with stars swimming in light, every radiant
+spire pointing the way to the heavens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it is impossible to conceive what the cañon is, or what impression it
+makes, from descriptions or pictures, however good. Naturally it is untellable
+even to those who have seen something perhaps a little like it on a small scale
+in this same plateau region. One&rsquo;s most extravagant expectations are
+indefinitely surpassed, though one expect much from what is said of it as
+&ldquo;the biggest chasm on earth&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;so big is it that all
+other big things,&mdash;Yosemite, the Yellowstone, the Pyramids,
+Chicago,&mdash;all would be lost if tumbled into it.&rdquo; Naturally enough,
+illustrations as to size are sought for among other cañons like or unlike it,
+with the common result of worse confounding confusion. The prudent keep
+silence. It was once said that the &ldquo;Grand Cañon could put a dozen
+Yosemites in its vest pocket.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The justly famous Grand Cañon of the Yellowstone is, like the Colorado,
+gorgeously colored and abruptly countersunk in a plateau, and both are mainly
+the work of water. But the Colorado&rsquo;s cañon is more than a thousand times
+larger, and as a score or two new buildings of ordinary size would not
+appreciably change the general view of a great city, so hundreds of
+Yellowstones might be eroded in the sides of the Colorado Cañon without
+noticeably augmenting its size or the richness of its sculpture. But it is not
+true that the great Yosemite rocks would be thus lost or hidden. Nothing of
+their kind in the world, so far as I know, rivals El Capitan and Tissiack, much
+less dwarfs or in any way belittles them. None of the sandstone or limestone
+precipices of the cañon that I have seen or heard of approaches in smooth,
+flawless strength and grandeur the granite face of El Capitan or the Tenaya
+side of Cloud&rsquo;s Rest. These colossal cliffs, types of permanence, are
+about three thousand and six thousand feet high; those of the cañon that are
+sheer are about half as high, and are types of fleeting change; while
+glorious-domed Tissiack, noblest of mountain buildings, far from being
+overshadowed or lost in this rosy, spiry cañon company, would draw every eye,
+and, in serene majesty, &ldquo;aboon them a&rsquo;&rdquo; she would take her
+place&mdash;castle, temple, palace, or tower. Nevertheless a noted writer,
+comparing the Grand Cañon in a general way with the glacial Yosemite, says:
+&ldquo;And the Yosemite&mdash;ah, the lovely Yosemite! Dumped down into the
+wilderness of gorges and mountains, it would take a guide who knew of its
+existence a long time to find it.&rdquo; This is striking, and shows up well
+above the levels of commonplace description; but it is confusing, and has the
+fatal fault of not being true. As well try to describe an eagle by putting a
+lark in it. &ldquo;And the lark&mdash;ah, the lovely lark! Dumped down the red,
+royal gorge of the eagle, it would be hard to find.&rdquo; Each in its own
+place is better, singing at heaven&rsquo;s gate, and sailing the sky with the
+clouds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every feature of nature&rsquo;s big face is beautiful,&mdash;height and hollow,
+wrinkle, furrow, and line,&mdash;and this is the main master furrow of its kind
+on our continent, incomparably greater and more impressive than any other yet
+discovered, or likely to be discovered, now that all the great rivers have been
+traced to their heads.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Colorado River rises in the heart of the continent on the dividing ranges
+and ridges between the two oceans, drains thousands of snowy mountains through
+narrow or spacious valleys, and thence through cañons of every color,
+sheer-walled and deep, all of which seem to be represented in this one grand
+cañon of cañons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is very hard to give anything like an adequate conception of its size, much
+more of its color, its vast wall-sculpture, the wealth of ornate architectural
+buildings that fill it, or, most of all, the tremendous impression it makes.
+According to Major Powell, it is about two hundred and seventeen miles long,
+from five to fifteen miles wide from rim to rim, and from about five thousand
+to six thousand feet deep. So tremendous a chasm would be one of the
+world&rsquo;s greatest wonders even if, like ordinary cañons cut in sedimentary
+rocks, it were empty and its walls were simple. But instead of being plain, the
+walls are so deeply and elaborately carved into all sorts of
+recesses&mdash;alcoves, cirques, amphitheaters, and side-cañons&mdash;that were
+you to trace the rim closely around on both sides your journey would be nearly
+a thousand miles long. Into all these recesses the level, continuous beds of
+rock in ledges and benches, with their various colors, run like broad ribbons,
+marvelously beautiful and effective even at a distance of ten or twelve miles.
+And the vast space these glorious walls inclose, instead of being empty, is
+crowded with gigantic architectural rock forms gorgeously colored and adorned
+with towers and spires like works of art.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Looking down from this level plateau, we are more impressed with a feeling of
+being on the top of everything than when looking from the summit of a mountain.
+From side to side of the vast gulf, temples, palaces, towers, and spires come
+soaring up in thick array half a mile or nearly a mile above their sunken,
+hidden bases, some to a level with our standpoint, but none higher. And in the
+inspiring morning light all are so fresh and rosy-looking that they seem
+new-born; as if, like the quick-growing crimson snow-plants of the California
+woods, they had just sprung up, hatched by the warm, brooding, motherly
+weather.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In trying to describe the great pines and sequoias of the Sierra, I have often
+thought that if one of those trees could be set by itself in some city park,
+its grandeur might there be impressively realized; while in its home forests,
+where all magnitudes are great, the weary, satiated traveler sees none of them
+truly. It is so with these majestic rock structures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though mere residual masses of the plateau, they are dowered with the grandeur
+and repose of mountains, together with the finely chiseled carving and modeling
+of man&rsquo;s temples and palaces, and often, to a considerable extent, with
+their symmetry. Some, closely observed, look like ruins; but even these stand
+plumb and true, and show architectural forms loaded with lines strictly regular
+and decorative, and all are arrayed in colors that storms and time seem only to
+brighten. They are not placed in regular rows in line with the river, but
+&ldquo;a&rsquo; through ither,&rdquo; as the Scotch say, in lavish, exuberant
+crowds, as if nature in wildest extravagance held her bravest structures as
+common as gravel-piles. Yonder stands a spiry cathedral nearly five thousand
+feet in height, nobly symmetrical, with sheer buttressed walls and arched doors
+and windows, as richly finished and decorated with sculptures as the great rock
+temples of India or Egypt. Beside it rises a huge castle with arched gateway,
+turrets, watch-towers, ramparts, etc., and to right and left palaces, obelisks,
+and pyramids fairly fill the gulf, all colossal and all lavishly painted and
+carved. Here and there a flat-topped structure may be seen, or one imperfectly
+domed; but the prevailing style is ornate Gothic, with many hints of Egyptian
+and Indian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throughout this vast extent of wild architecture&mdash;nature&rsquo;s own
+capital city&mdash;there seem to be no ordinary dwellings. All look like grand
+and important public structures, except perhaps some of the lower pyramids,
+broad-based and sharp-pointed, covered with down-flowing talus like loosely set
+tents with hollow, sagging sides. The roofs often have disintegrated rocks
+heaped and draggled over them, but in the main the masonry is firm and laid in
+regular courses, as if done by square and rule.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nevertheless they are ever changing: their tops are now a dome, now a flat
+table or a spire, as harder or softer strata are reached in their slow
+degradation, while the sides, with all their fine moldings, are being steadily
+undermined and eaten away. But no essential change in style or color is thus
+effected. From century to century they stand the same. What seems confusion
+among the rough earthquake-shaken crags nearest one comes to order as soon as
+the main plan of the various structures appears. Every building, however
+complicated and laden with ornamental lines, is at one with itself and every
+one of its neighbors, for the same characteristic controlling belts of color
+and solid strata extend with wonderful constancy for very great distances, and
+pass through and give style to thousands of separate structures, however their
+smaller characters may vary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of all the various kinds of ornamental work displayed,&mdash;carving, tracery
+on cliff-faces, moldings, arches, pinnacles,&mdash;none is more admirably
+effective or charms more than the webs of rain-channeled taluses. Marvelously
+extensive, without the slightest appearance of waste or excess, they cover
+roofs and dome-tops and the base of every cliff, belt each spire and pyramid
+and massy, towering temple, and in beautiful continuous lines go sweeping along
+the great walls in and out around all the intricate system of side-cañons,
+amphitheaters, cirques, and scallops into which they are sculptured. From one
+point hundreds of miles of this fairy embroidery may be traced. It is all so
+fine and orderly that it would seem that not only had the clouds and streams
+been kept harmoniously busy in the making of it, but that every raindrop sent
+like a bullet to a mark had been the subject of a separate thought, so sure is
+the outcome of beauty through the stormy centuries. Surely nowhere else are
+there illustrations so striking of the natural beauty of desolation and death,
+so many of nature&rsquo;s own mountain buildings wasting in glory of high
+desert air&mdash;going to dust. See how steadfast in beauty they all are in
+their going. Look again and again how the rough, dusty boulders and sand of
+disintegration from the upper ledges wreathe in beauty the next and next below
+with these wonderful taluses, and how the colors are finer the faster the
+waste. We oftentimes see nature giving beauty for ashes,&mdash;as in the
+flowers of a prairie after fire,&mdash;but here the very dust and ashes are
+beautiful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gazing across the mighty chasm, we at last discover that it is not its great
+depth nor length, nor yet these wonderful buildings, that most impresses us. It
+is its immense width, sharply defined by precipitous walls plunging suddenly
+down from a flat plain, declaring in terms instantly apprehended that the vast
+gulf is a gash in the once unbroken plateau, made by slow, orderly erosion and
+removal of huge beds of rocks. Other valleys of erosion are as great,&mdash;in
+all their dimensions some are greater,&mdash;but none of these produces an
+effect on the imagination at once so quick and profound, coming without study,
+given at a glance. Therefore by far the greatest and most influential feature
+of this view from Bright Angel or any other of the cañon views is the opposite
+wall. Of the one beneath our feet we see only fragmentary sections in cirques
+and amphitheaters and on the sides of the outjutting promontories between them,
+while the other, though far distant, is beheld in all its glory of color and
+noble proportions&mdash;the one supreme beauty and wonder to which the eye is
+ever turning. For while charming with its beauty it tells the story of the
+stupendous erosion of the cañon&mdash;the foundation of the unspeakable
+impression made on everybody. It seems a gigantic statement for even nature to
+make, all in one mighty stone word, apprehended at once like a burst of light,
+celestial color its natural vesture, coming in glory to mind and heart as to a
+home prepared for it from the very beginning. Wildness so godful, cosmic,
+primeval, bestows a new sense of earth&rsquo;s beauty and size. Not even from
+high mountains does the world seem so wide, so like a star in glory of light on
+its way through the heavens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have observed scenery-hunters of all sorts getting first views of yosemites,
+glaciers. While Mountain ranges, etc. Mixed with the enthusiasm which such
+scenery naturally excites, there is often weak gushing, and many splutter aloud
+like little waterfalls. Here, for a few moments at least, there is silence, and
+all are in dead earnest, as if awed and hushed by an earthquake&mdash;perhaps
+until the cook cries &ldquo;Breakfast!&rdquo; or the stable-boy &ldquo;Horses
+are ready!&rdquo; Then the poor unfortunates, slaves of regular habits, turn
+quickly away, gasping and muttering as if wondering where they had been and
+what had enchanted them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Roads have been made from Bright Angel Hotel through the Cocanini Forest to the
+ends of outstanding promontories, commanding extensive views up and down the
+cañon. The nearest of them, three or four miles east and west, are
+McNeil&rsquo;s Point and Rowe&rsquo;s Point; the latter, besides commanding the
+eternally interesting cañon, gives wide-sweeping views southeast and west over
+the dark forest roof to the San Francisco and Mount Trumbull
+volcanoes&mdash;the bluest of mountains over the blackest of level woods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instead of thus riding in dust with the crowd, more will be gained by going
+quietly afoot along the rim at different times of day and night, free to
+observe the vegetation, the fossils in the rocks, the seams beneath overhanging
+ledges once inhabited by Indians, and to watch the stupendous scenery in the
+changing lights and shadows, clouds, showers, and storms. One need not go
+hunting the so-called &ldquo;points of interest.&rdquo; The verge anywhere,
+everywhere, is a point of interest beyond one&rsquo;s wildest dreams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As yet, few of the promontories or throng of mountain buildings in the cañon
+are named. Nor among such exuberance of forms are names thought of by the
+bewildered, hurried tourist. He would be as likely to think of names for waves
+in a storm. The Eastern and Western Cloisters, Hindu Amphitheater, Cape Royal,
+Powell&rsquo;s Plateau, and Grand View Point, Point Sublime, Bissell and Moran
+points, the Temple of Set, Vishnu&rsquo;s Temple, Shiva&rsquo;s Temple, Twin
+Temples, Tower of Babel, Hance&rsquo;s Column&mdash;these fairly good names
+given by Dutton, Holmes, Moran, and others are scattered over a large stretch
+of the cañon wilderness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the cañon rock-beds are lavishly painted, except a few neutral bars and the
+granite notch at the bottom occupied by the river, which makes but little sign.
+It is a vast wilderness of rocks in a sea of light, colored and glowing like
+oak and maple woods in autumn, when the sun-gold is richest. I have just said
+that it is impossible to learn what the cañon is like from descriptions and
+pictures. Powell&rsquo;s and Dutton&rsquo;s descriptions present magnificent
+views not only of the cañon but of all the grand region round about it; and
+Holmes&rsquo;s drawings, accompanying Dutton&rsquo;s report, are wonderfully
+good. Surely faithful and loving skill can go no further in putting the
+multitudinous decorated forms on paper. But the <i>colors</i>, the living,
+rejoicing <i>colors</i>, chanting morning and evening in chorus to heaven!
+Whose brush or pencil, however lovingly inspired, can give us these? And if
+paint is of no effect, what hope lies in pen-work? Only this: some may be
+incited by it to go and see for themselves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No other range of mountainous rock-work of anything like the same extent have I
+seen that is so strangely, boldly, lavishly colored. The famous Yellowstone
+Cañon below the falls comes to mind, but, wonderful as it is, and well deserved
+as is its fame, compared with this it is only a bright rainbow ribbon at the
+roots of the pines. Each of the series of level, continuous beds of
+carboniferous rocks of the cañon has, as we have seen, its own characteristic
+color. The summit limestone-beds are pale yellow; next below these are the
+beautiful rose-colored cross-bedded sandstones; next there are a thousand feet
+of brilliant red sandstones; and below these the red wall limestones, over two
+thousand feet thick, rich massy red, the greatest and most influential of the
+series, and forming the main color-fountain. Between these are many
+neutral-tinted beds. The prevailing colors are wonderfully deep and clear,
+changing and blending with varying intensity from hour to hour, day to day,
+season to season; throbbing, wavering, glowing, responding to every passing
+cloud or storm, a world of color in itself, now burning in separate rainbow
+bars streaked and blotched with shade, now glowing in one smooth, all-pervading
+ethereal radiance like the alpenglow, uniting the rocky world with the heavens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dawn, as in all the pure, dry desert country, is ineffably beautiful; and
+when the first level sunbeams sting the domes and spires, with what a burst of
+power the big, wild days begin! The dead and the living, rocks and hearts
+alike, awake and sing the new-old song of creation. All the massy headlands and
+salient angles of the walls, and the multitudinous temples and palaces, seem to
+catch the light at once, and cast thick black shadows athwart hollow and gorge,
+bringing out details as well as the main massive features of the architecture;
+while all the rocks, as if wild with life, throb and quiver and glow in the
+glorious sunburst, rejoicing. Every rock temple then becomes a temple of music;
+every spire and pinnacle an angel of light and song, shouting color
+halleluiahs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the day draws to a close, shadows, wondrous, black, and thick, like those of
+the morning, fill up the wall hollows, while the glowing rocks, their rough
+angles burned off, seem soft and hot to the heart as they stand submerged in
+purple haze, which now fills the cañon like a sea. Still deeper, richer, more
+divine grow the great walls and temples, until in the supreme flaming glory of
+sunset the whole cañon is transfigured, as if all the life and light of
+centuries of sunshine stored up and condensed in the rocks was now being poured
+forth as from one glorious fountain, flooding both earth and sky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strange to say, in the full white effulgence of the midday hours the bright
+colors grow dim and terrestrial in common gray haze; and the rocks, after the
+manner of mountains, seem to crouch and drowse and shrink to less than half
+their real stature, and have nothing to say to one, as if not at home. But it
+is fine to see how quickly they come to life and grow radiant and communicative
+as soon as a band of white clouds come floating by. As if shouting for joy,
+they seem to spring up to meet them in hearty salutation, eager to touch them
+and beg their blessings. It is just in the midst of these dull midday hours
+that the cañon clouds are born.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A good storm-cloud full of lightning and rain on its way to its work on a sunny
+desert day is a glorious object. Across the cañon, opposite the hotel, is a
+little tributary of the Colorado called Bright Angel Creek. A fountain-cloud
+still better deserves the name &ldquo;Angel of the Desert
+Wells&rdquo;&mdash;clad in bright plumage, carrying cool shade and living water
+to countless animals and plants ready to perish, noble in form and gesture,
+seeming able for anything, pouring life-giving, wonder-working floods from its
+alabaster fountains, as if some sky-lake had broken. To every gulch and gorge
+on its favorite ground is given a passionate torrent, roaring, replying to the
+rejoicing lightning&mdash;stones, tons in weight, hurrying away as if
+frightened, showing something of the way Grand Cañon work is done. Most of the
+fertile summer clouds of the cañon are of this sort, massive, swelling cumuli,
+growing rapidly, displaying delicious tones of purple and gray in the hollows
+of their sun-beaten bosses, showering favored areas of the heated landscape,
+and vanishing in an hour or two. Some, busy and thoughtful-looking, glide with
+beautiful motion along the middle of the cañon in flocks, turning aside here
+and there, lingering as if studying the needs of particular spots, exploring
+side-cañons, peering into hollows like birds seeking nest-places, or hovering
+aloft on outspread wings. They scan all the red wilderness, dispensing their
+blessings of cool shadows and rain where the need is the greatest, refreshing
+the rocks, their offspring as well as the vegetation, continuing their
+sculpture, deepening gorges and sharpening peaks. Sometimes, blending all
+together, they weave a ceiling from rim to rim, perhaps opening a window here
+and there for sunshine to stream through, suddenly lighting some palace or
+temple and making it flare in the rain as if on fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sometimes, as one sits gazing from a high, jutting promontory, the sky all
+clear, showing not the slightest wisp or penciling, a bright band of cumuli
+will appear suddenly, coming up the cañon in single file, as if tracing a
+well-known trail, passing in review, each in turn darting its lances and
+dropping its shower, making a row of little vertical rivers in the air above
+the big brown one. Others seem to grow from mere points, and fly high above the
+cañon, yet following its course for a long time, noiseless, as if hunting, then
+suddenly darting lightning at unseen marks, and hurrying on. Or they loiter
+here and there as if idle, like laborers out of work, waiting to be hired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Half a dozen or more showers may oftentimes be seen falling at once, while far
+the greater part of the sky is in sunshine, and not a raindrop comes nigh one.
+These thunder-showers from as many separate clouds, looking like wisps of long
+hair, may vary greatly in effects. The pale, faint streaks are showers that
+fail to reach the ground, being evaporated on the way down through the dry,
+thirsty air, like streams in deserts. Many, on the other hand, which in the
+distance seem insignificant, are really heavy rain, however local; these are
+the gray wisps well zigzagged with lightning. The darker ones are torrent rain,
+which on broad, steep slopes of favorable conformation give rise to so-called
+&ldquo;cloudbursts&rdquo;; and wonderful is the commotion they cause. The
+gorges and gulches below them, usually dry, break out in loud uproar, with a
+sudden downrush of muddy, boulder-laden floods. Down they all go in one
+simultaneous gush, roaring like lions rudely awakened, each of the tawny brood
+actually kicking up a dust at the first onset.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the winter months snow falls over all the high plateau, usually to a
+considerable depth, whitening the rim and the roofs of the cañon buildings. But
+last winter, when I arrived at Bright Angel in the middle of January, there was
+no snow in sight, and the ground was dry, greatly to my disappointment, for I
+had made the trip mainly to see the cañon in its winter garb. Soothingly I was
+informed that this was an exceptional season, and that the good snow might
+arrive at any time. After waiting a few days, I gladly hailed a broad-browed
+cloud coming grandly on from the west in big promising blackness, very unlike
+the white sailors of the summer skies. Under the lee of a rim-ledge, with
+another snow-lover, I watched its movements as it took possession of the cañon
+and all the adjacent region in sight. Trailing its gray fringes over the spiry
+tops of the great temples and towers, it gradually settled lower, embracing
+them all with ineffable kindness and gentleness of touch, and fondled the
+little cedars and pines as they quivered eagerly in the wind like young birds
+begging their mothers to feed them. The first flakes and crystals began to fly
+about noon, sweeping straight up the middle of the cañon, and swirling in
+magnificent eddies along the sides. Gradually the hearty swarms closed their
+ranks, and all the cañon was lost in gray gloom except a short section of the
+wall and a few trees beside us, which looked glad with snow in their needles
+and about their feet as they leaned out over the gulf. Suddenly the storm
+opened with magical effect to the north over the cañon of Bright Angel Creek,
+inclosing a sunlit mass of the cañon architecture, spanned by great white
+concentric arches of cloud like the bows of a silvery aurora. Above these and a
+little back of them was a series of upboiling purple clouds, and high above
+all, in the background, a range of noble cumuli towered aloft like snow-laden
+mountains, their pure pearl bosses flooded with sunshine. The whole noble
+picture, calmly glowing, was framed in thick gray gloom, which soon closed over
+it; and the storm went on, opening and closing until night covered all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two days later, when we were on a jutting point about eighteen miles east of
+Bright Angel and one thousand feet higher, we enjoyed another storm of equal
+glory as to cloud effects, though only a few inches of snow fell. Before the
+storm began we had a magnificent view of this grander upper part of the cañon
+and also of the Cocanini Forest and Painted Desert. The march of the clouds
+with their storm-banners flying over this sublime landscape was unspeakably
+glorious, and so also was the breaking up of the storm next morning&mdash;the
+mingling of silver-capped rock, sunshine, and cloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Most tourists make out to be in a hurry even here; therefore their few days or
+hours would be best spent on the promontories nearest the hotel. Yet a
+surprising number go down the Bright Angel trail to the brink of the inner
+gloomy granite gorge overlooking the river. Deep cañons attract like high
+mountains; the deeper they are, the more surely are we drawn into them. On
+foot, of course, there is no danger whatever, and, with ordinary precautions,
+but little on animals. In comfortable tourist faith, unthinking, unfearing,
+down go men, women, and children on whatever is offered, horse, mule, or burro,
+as if saying with Jean Paul, &ldquo;fear nothing but fear&rdquo;&mdash;not
+without reason, for these cañon trails down the stairways of the gods are less
+dangerous than they seem, less dangerous than home stairs. The guides are
+cautious, and so are the experienced, much-enduring beasts. The scrawniest
+Rosinantes and wizened-rat mules cling hard to the rocks endwise or sidewise,
+like lizards or ants. From terrace to terrace, climate to climate, down one
+creeps in sun and shade, through gorge and gully and grassy ravine, and, after
+a long scramble on foot, at last beneath the mighty cliffs one comes to the
+grand, roaring river.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the mountaineer the depth of the cañon, from five thousand to six thousand
+feet, will not seem so very wonderful, for he has often explored others that
+are about as deep. But the most experienced will be awe-struck but the vast
+extent of strange, countersunk scenery, the multitude of huge rock monuments of
+painted masonry built up in regular courses towering above, beneath, and round
+about him. By the Bright Angel trail the last fifteen hundred feet of the
+descent to the river has to be made afoot down the gorge of Indian Garden
+Creek. Most of the visitors do not like this part, and are content to stop at
+the end of the horse-trail and look down on the dull-brown flood from the edge
+of the Indian Garden Plateau. By the new Hance trail, excepting a few daringly
+steep spots, you can ride all the way to the river, where there is a good
+spacious camp-ground in a mesquit-grove. This trail, built by brave Hance,
+begins on the highest part of the rim, eight thousand feet above the sea, a
+thousand feet higher than the head of Bright Angel trail, and the descent is a
+little over six thousand feet, through a wonderful variety of climate and life.
+Often late in the fall, when frosty winds are blowing and snow is flying at one
+end of the trail, tender plants are blooming in balmy summer weather at the
+other. The trip down and up can be made afoot easily in a day. In this way one
+is free to observe the scenery and vegetation, instead of merely clinging to
+his animal and watching its steps. But all who have time should go prepared to
+camp awhile on the riverbank, to rest and learn something about the plants and
+animals and the mighty flood roaring past. In cool, shady amphitheaters at the
+head of the trail there are groves of white silver fir and Douglas spruce, with
+ferns and saxifrages that recall snowy mountains; below these, yellow pine,
+nut-pine, juniper, hop-hornbeam, ash, maple, holly-leaved berberis, cowania,
+spiraea, dwarf oak, and other small shrubs and trees. In dry gulches and on
+taluses and sun-beaten crags are sparsely scattered yuccas, cactuses, agave,
+etc. Where springs gush from the rocks there are willow thickets, grassy flats,
+and bright flowery gardens, and in the hottest recesses the delicate abronia,
+mesquit, woody compositae, and arborescent cactuses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The most striking and characteristic part of this widely varied vegetation are
+the cactaceae&mdash;strange, leafless, old-fashioned plants with beautiful
+flowers and fruit, in every way able and admirable. While grimly defending
+themselves with innumerable barbed spears, they offer both food and drink to
+man and beast. Their juicy globes and disks and fluted cylindrical columns are
+almost the only desert wells that never go dry, and they always seem to rejoice
+the more and grow plumper and juicier the hotter the sunshine and sand. Some
+are spherical, like rolled-up porcupines, crouching in rock hollows beneath a
+mist of gray lances, unmoved by the wildest winds. Others, standing as erect as
+bushes and trees or tall branchless pillars crowned with magnificent flowers,
+their prickly armor sparkling, look boldly abroad over the glaring desert,
+making the strangest forests ever seen or dreamed of. <i>Cereus giganteus</i>,
+the grim chief of the desert tribe, is often thirty or forty feet high in
+southern Arizona. Several species of tree yuccas in the same deserts, laden in
+early spring with superb while lilies, form forests hardly less wonderful,
+though here they grow singly or in small lonely groves. The low, almost
+stemless <i>Yucca baccata</i>, with beautiful lily-flowers and sweet
+banana-like fruit, prized by the Indians, is common along the cañon rim,
+growing on lean, rocky soil beneath mountain-mahogany, nut-pines, and junipers,
+beside dense flowery mats of <i>Spiraea caespitosa</i> and the beautiful
+pinnate-leaved <i>Spiraea millefolium</i>. The nut-pine, <i>Pinus edulis</i>,
+scattered along the upper slopes and roofs of the cañon buildings, is the
+principal tree of the strange Dwarf Cocanini Forest. It is a picturesque stub
+of a pine about twenty-five feet high, usually-with dead, lichened limbs thrust
+through its rounded head, and grows on crags and fissured rock tables, braving
+heat and frost, snow and drought, and continues patiently, faithfully fruitful
+for centuries. Indians and insects and almost every desert bird and beast come
+to it to be fed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To civilized people from corn and cattle and wheat-field countries the cañon at
+first sight seems as uninhabitable as a glacier crevasse, utterly silent and
+barren. Nevertheless it is the home of a multitude of our fellow-mortals, men
+as well as animals and plants. Centuries ago it was inhabited by tribes of
+Indians, who, long before Columbus saw America, built thousands of stone houses
+in its crags, and large ones, some of them several stories high, with hundreds
+of rooms, on the mesas of the adjacent regions. Their cliff-dwellings, almost
+numberless, are still to be seen in the cañon, scattered along both sides from
+top to bottom and throughout its entire length, built of stone and mortar in
+seams and fissures like swallows&rsquo; nests, or on isolated ridges and peaks.
+The ruins of larger buildings are found on open spots by the river, but most of
+them aloft on the brink of the wildest, giddiest precipices, sites evidently
+chosen for safety from enemies, and seemingly accessible only to the birds of
+the air. Many caves were also used as dwelling-places, as were mere seams on
+cliff-fronts formed by unequal weathering and with or without outer or side
+walls; and some of them were covered with colored pictures of animals. The most
+interesting of these cliff-dwellings had pathetic little ribbon-like strips of
+garden on narrow terraces, where irrigating-water could be carried to
+them&mdash;most romantic of sky-gardens, but eloquent of hard times.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In recesses along the river and on the first plateau flats above its gorge were
+fields and gardens of considerable size, where irrigating-ditches may still be
+traced. Some of these ancient gardens are still cultivated by Indians,
+descendants of cliff dwellers, who raise corn, squashes, melons, potatoes,
+etc., to reinforce the produce of the many wild food-furnishing plants, nuts,
+beans, berries, yucca and cactus fruits, grass and sunflower seeds, etc., and
+the flesh of animals, deer, rabbits, lizards, etc. The cañon Indians I have met
+here seem to be living much as did their ancestors, though not now driven into
+rock dens. They are able, erect men, with commanding eyes, which nothing that
+they wish to see can escape. They are never in a hurry, have a strikingly
+measured, deliberate, bearish manner of moving the limbs and turning the head,
+are capable of enduring weather, thirst, hunger, and over-abundance, and are
+blessed with stomachs which triumph over everything the wilderness may offer.
+Evidently their lives are not bitter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The largest of the cañon animals one is likely to see is the wild sheep, or
+Rocky Mountain bighorn, a most admirable beast, with limbs that never fail, at
+home on the most nerve-trying precipices, acquainted with all the springs and
+passes and broken-down jumpable places in the sheer ribbon cliffs, bounding
+from crag to crag in easy grace and confidence of strength, his great horns
+held high above his shoulders, wild red blood beating and hissing through every
+fiber of him like the wind through a quivering mountain pine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deer also are occasionally met in the cañon, making their way to the river when
+the wells of the plateau are dry. Along the short spring streams beavers are
+still busy, as is shown by the cotton-wood and willow timber they have cut and
+peeled, found in all the river drift-heaps. In the most barren cliffs and
+gulches there dwell a multitude of lesser animals, well-dressed, clear-eyed,
+happy little beasts&mdash;wood-rats, kangaroo-rats, gophers, wood-mice, skunks,
+rabbits, bob cats, and many others, gathering food, or dozing in their
+sun-warmed dens. Lizards, too, of every kind and color are here enjoying life
+on the hot cliffs, and making the brightest of them brighter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor is there any lack of feathered people. The golden eagle may be seen, and
+the osprey, hawks, jays, humming-birds, the mourning-dove, and cheery familiar
+singers&mdash;the black-headed grosbeak, robin, bluebird, Townsend&rsquo;s
+thrush, and many warblers, sailing the sky and enlivening the rocks and bushes
+through all the cañon wilderness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here at Hance&rsquo;s river camp or a few miles above it brave Powell and his
+brave men passed their first night in the cañon on their adventurous voyage of
+discovery thirty-three years ago. They faced a thousand dangers, open or
+hidden, now in their boats gladly sliding down swift, smooth reaches, now
+rolled over and over in back-combing surges of rough, roaring cataracts, sucked
+under in eddies, swimming like beavers, tossed and beaten like castaway
+drift&mdash;stout-hearted, undaunted, doing their work through it all. After a
+month of this they floated smoothly out of the dark, gloomy, roaring abyss into
+light and safety two hundred miles below. As the flood rushes past us,
+heavy-laden with desert mud, we naturally think of its sources, its countless
+silvery branches outspread on thousands of snowy mountains along the crest of
+the continent, and the life of them, the beauty of them, their history and
+romance. Its topmost springs are far north and east in Wyoming and Colorado, on
+the snowy Wind River, Front, Park, and Sawatch ranges, dividing the two ocean
+waters, and the Elk, Wasatch, Uinta, and innumerable spurs streaked with
+streams, made famous by early explorers and hunters. It is a river of
+rivers&mdash;the Du Chesne, San Rafael, Yampa, Dolores, Gunnison, Cotchetopa,
+Uncompahgre, Eagle, and Roaring rivers, the Green and the Grand, and scores of
+others with branches innumerable, as mad and glad a band as ever sang on
+mountains, descending in glory of foam and spray from snow-banks and glaciers
+through their rocky moraine-dammed, beaver-dammed channels. Then, all emerging
+from dark balsam and pine woods and coming together, they meander through wide,
+sunny park valleys, and at length enter the great plateau and flow in deep
+cañons, the beginning of the system culminating in this grand cañon of cañons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our warm cañon camp is also a good place to give a thought to the glaciers
+which still exist at the heads of the highest tributaries. Some of them are of
+considerable size, especially those on the Wind River and Sawatch ranges in
+Wyoming and Colorado. They are remnants of a vast system of glaciers which
+recently covered the upper part of the Colorado basin, sculptured its peaks,
+ridges, and valleys to their present forms, and extended far out over the
+plateau region&mdash;how far I cannot now say. It appears, therefore, that,
+however old the main trunk of the Colorado may be, all its wide-spread upper
+branches and the landscapes they flow through are new-born, scarce at all
+changed as yet in any important feature since they first came to light at the
+close of the glacial period.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The so-called Grand Colorado Plateau, of which the Grand Cañon is only one of
+its well-proportioned features, extends with a breadth of hundreds of miles
+from the flanks of the Wasatch and Park Mountains to the south of the San
+Francisco Peaks. Immediately to the north of the deepest part of the cañon it
+rises in a series of subordinate plateaus, diversified with green meadows,
+marshes, bogs, ponds, forests, and grovy park valleys, a favorite Indian
+hunting-ground, inhabited by elk, deer, beaver, etc. But far the greater part
+of the plateau is good sound desert, rocky, sandy, or fluffy with loose ashes
+and dust, dissected in some places into a labyrinth of stream-channel chasms
+like cracks in a dry clay-bed, or the narrow slit crevasses of
+glaciers,&mdash;blackened with lava-flows, dotted with volcanoes and beautiful
+buttes, and lined with long continuous escarpments,&mdash;a vast bed of
+sediments of an ancient sea-bottom, still nearly as level as when first laid
+down after being heaved into the sky a mile or two high.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Walking quietly about in the alleys and byways of the Grand Cañon City, we
+learn something of the way it was made; and all must admire effects so great
+from means apparently so simple: rain striking light hammer-blows or heavier in
+streams, with many rest Sundays; soft air and light, gentle sappers and miners,
+toiling forever; the big river sawing the plateau asunder, carrying away the
+eroded and ground waste, and exposing the edges of the strata to the weather;
+rain torrents sawing cross-streets and alleys, exposing the strata in the same
+way in hundreds of sections, the softer, less resisting beds weathering and
+receding faster, thus undermining the harder beds, which fall, not only in
+small weathered particles, but in heavy sheer-cleaving masses, assisted down
+from time to time by kindly earthquakes, rain torrents rushing the fallen
+material to the river, keeping the wall rocks constantly exposed. Thus the
+cañon grows wider and deeper. So also do the side-cañons and amphitheaters,
+while secondary gorges and cirques gradually isolate masses of the
+promontories, forming new buildings, all of which are being weathered and
+pulled and shaken down while being built, showing destruction and creation as
+one. We see the proudest temples and palaces in stateliest attitudes, wearing
+their sheets of detritus as royal robes, shedding off showers of red and yellow
+stones like trees in autumn shedding their leaves, going to dust like beautiful
+days to night, proclaiming as with the tongues of angels the natural beauty of
+death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every building is seen to be a remnant of once continuous beds of
+sediments&mdash;sand and slime on the floor of an ancient sea, and filled with
+the remains of animals, and that every particle of the sandstones and
+limestones of these wonderful structures was derived from other landscapes,
+weathered and rolled and ground in the storms and streams of other ages. And
+when we examine the escarpments, hills, buttes, and other monumental masses of
+the plateau on either side of the cañon, we discover that an amount of material
+has been carried off in the general denudation of the region compared with
+which even that carried away in the making of the Grand Cañon is as nothing.
+Thus each wonder in sight becomes a window through which other wonders come to
+view. In no other part of this continent are the wonders of geology, the
+records of the world&rsquo;s auld lang syne, more widely opened, or displayed
+in higher piles. The whole cañon is a mine of fossils, in which five thousand
+feet of horizontal strata are exposed in regular succession over more than a
+thousand square miles of wall-space, and on the adjacent plateau region there
+is another series of beds twice as thick, forming a grand geological
+library&mdash;a collection of stone books covering thousands of miles of
+shelving tier on tier conveniently arranged for the student. And with what
+wonderful scriptures are their pages filled&mdash;myriad forms of successive
+floras and faunas, lavishly illustrated with colored drawings, carrying us back
+into the midst of the life of a past infinitely remote. And as we go on and on,
+studying this old, old life in the light of the life beating warmly about us,
+we enrich and lengthen our own.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12298 ***</div>
+</body>
+
+</html>