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<title>
The Project Gutenberg's eBook of Jack in the Rockies, by George Bird Grinnell
@@ -170,48 +170,7 @@ hr.c25
</style>
</head>
<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Jack in the Rockies, by George Bird Grinnell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Jack in the Rockies
- A Boy's Adventures with a Pack Train
-
-Author: George Bird Grinnell
-
-Illustrator: Edwin Willard Deming
-
-Release Date: January 15, 2014 [EBook #44671]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JACK IN THE ROCKIES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Mary Akers and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
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-
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-
-
-</pre>
-
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44671 ***</div>
<div class="transnote">
<p>Transcriber's note:<br />
@@ -2619,7 +2578,7 @@ prairie, about half a mile below the house. I went
down to see who it was, and found to my surprise that
it was a lone Indian woman, and as soon as I came up
to her she began to talk to me in a language which I
-at once knew to be Nez Percés, but which I could not
+at once knew to be Nez Percés, but which I could not
understand. I replied to her in Sioux, and found
that she understood and could speak a little of that
tongue, and by piecing it out with signs we got along
@@ -2640,9 +2599,9 @@ where she had come from, where she was going and
all about herself, and I interpreted her tale, sentence
by sentence, to the boys. She said: 'I came from
Sitting Bull's camp on Milk River, where some of my
-people, Nez Percés, are living with the Sioux. Two
+people, Nez Percés, are living with the Sioux. Two
years ago, my son went with some Sioux and Nez
-Percés to war against the Crows. They had a big
+Percés to war against the Crows. They had a big
fight on the Yellowstone, and it was supposed that
my son was killed. But not long ago I heard that the
Crows had captured my boy, and that he is still living
@@ -3207,7 +3166,7 @@ Their way led them through the beautiful Gallatin
Valley, crossing the surveyed line of the Northern
Pacific railroad, then being built westward, and then
over the mountains to the valley of the Yellowstone,
-which they followed up to the cañon. Before they
+which they followed up to the cañon. Before they
reached the Gallatin Valley they had seen plenty of
buffalo, and had killed one for fresh meat, while in the
Valley there were many antelope. In the Bridger
@@ -3220,7 +3179,7 @@ and two small cubs.</p>
were abundant, and they greatly enjoyed the delicious
fish which were so easily caught.</p>
-<p>A wagon road had been built through the cañon
+<p>A wagon road had been built through the cañon
into the Yellowstone Park, and here a number of
white people were travelling back and forth, and
<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
@@ -3279,7 +3238,7 @@ below."</p>
<p>The next morning they moved camp, and rode over
toward the river intending to look at the Grand
-cañon, and the wonderful falls of which they had
+cañon, and the wonderful falls of which they had
heard.</p>
<p>Although the Yellowstone Park had been known
@@ -3324,7 +3283,7 @@ which, further down changed to spray. The falls
are 162 feet high, and clouds of white vapor constantly
rose from the water below, and hid the view.
Looking down the stream, they had a glimpse of the
-wonderful cañon below.</p>
+wonderful cañon below.</p>
<p>The roar of the falls was so tremendous that conversation
was impossible, and nothing was said; but
@@ -3338,10 +3297,10 @@ foot of the fall came out the narrow green ribbon of
the river, winding and twisting, hardly to be recognized
as a river, dwarfed by distance, and creeping
with a slow oily current. On either side the stream
-rose the walls of the cañon, five or six hundred feet
+rose the walls of the cañon, five or six hundred feet
to the pine-fringed margin above.</p>
-<p>Looking down the stream, Jack saw a cañon a
+<p>Looking down the stream, Jack saw a cañon a
thousand feet deep, and perhaps twice as wide, extending
for miles to the northward. Its sides were
curiously sculptured and carved into fantastic forms.
@@ -3350,19 +3309,19 @@ rock, ranged side by side upon the same horizontal
ledge along its face. Again, a narrow buttress arose
from the river's level in a series of pinnacles and turrets
overtopping one another, until the summit of the
-cañon wall was reached. At one place that wall was
+cañon wall was reached. At one place that wall was
so nearly perpendicular that it seemed as though a
stone dropped from the edge of the cliff would fall at
once into the water of the river. In another, the
decomposing rock had been eaten away above until a
talus of fallen rock and earth arose in a steep slope
half way to the top. But to Jack's mind the glory of
-the cañon was in its color. The walls glowed with a
+the cañon was in its color. The walls glowed with a
vivid intense radiance which is not less wonderful
than beautiful. Browns and reds and pinks and yellows,
and delicate grays and pure whites had painted
these hard rocks with a wealth of coloring hardly
-to be described in words. In the sun the cañon
+to be described in words. In the sun the cañon
walls shone with brilliancy. When the clouds passed
<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
over the sky they grew duller and softer, but were
@@ -3373,7 +3332,7 @@ all the hues of the rainbow.</p>
<p>The travellers sat long watching this wonderful
sight, and then pushing along the margin of the
-cañon, below the falls, walked out on a projecting
+cañon, below the falls, walked out on a projecting
point of rock, and looked up and down the river. The
more they gazed, the more wonderful it seemed, the
harder to take it all in, and the harder to put into
@@ -3384,14 +3343,14 @@ point on which they had walked, was a great nest, in
which the boys noticed two large and downy young
birds. Flying up and down over the river, sometimes
low over the water, again far above the heads of those
-who stood on the edge of the cañon, were great
+who stood on the edge of the cañon, were great
hawks&mdash;eagles, Hugh afterward said they were, but
Jack recognized them as fish-hawks&mdash;and while they
were standing there, one of these great birds brought
a fish to the nest, and tearing it to pieces with its
beak, gave the fragments to its greedy young. Jack
noticed, also, little sparrow-hawks flying about the
-edge of the cañon, and, far below at the edge of the
+edge of the cañon, and, far below at the edge of the
river, saw little birds flying from point to point, which
he thought must be dippers.</p>
@@ -3512,7 +3471,7 @@ view, and each view has a charm that is all its own."</p>
<p>The geologist sat there long with them that night,
talking to them in a most interesting way about the
-Park and the geysers and the cañons. He told them
+Park and the geysers and the cañons. He told them
that all this country was volcanic in origin, and that
for some reason or other, which he did not know, the
heat still remained close to the surface of the earth;
@@ -5540,7 +5499,7 @@ can't get away to-night; they're likely to leave us, and
if they do, we'll have to hunt them to-morrow."</p>
<p>Before entering this valley they had passed up
-through a narrow cañon, riding for a short distance in
+through a narrow cañon, riding for a short distance in
the stream-bed, and Hugh, who had noticed two or
three spruce trees standing on either side of the
stream, took an axe, went down there, and felling two
@@ -5578,7 +5537,7 @@ inches deep, though perhaps in the open where it had a
chance to melt or to blow off there was not so much.</p>
<p>As they went forward, Jack was more and more
-interested in the tracks. Down at the foot of a cañon
+interested in the tracks. Down at the foot of a cañon
wall in the valley he saw a series of tiny parallel dots
in the snow, which he thought must have been made
by a little striped squirrel, which had run out from the
@@ -6131,7 +6090,7 @@ Before they had gone far Hugh stopped, and, turning,
said to the boys as they came up, "I don't
like the looks of things ahead; I reckon we'll have to
go up on the hillside down below here. Looks to me
-like we were coming to a cañon."</p>
+like we were coming to a cañon."</p>
<p>A little farther along it proved so; and Hugh, after
going ahead and making a little investigation, called
@@ -8634,7 +8593,7 @@ made in many a year."</p>
<p>For some days they travelled down the Sweetwater,
<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</a></span>
having an open easy road and making good progress.
-They passed the cañon at the mouth of the river where
+They passed the cañon at the mouth of the river where
it enters into the Platte, and now felt that they were
getting near home.</p>
@@ -9674,382 +9633,6 @@ expedition he was ever on.</p>
<hr class="c25" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Jack in the Rockies, by George Bird Grinnell
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