قراءة كتاب The Crest of the Continent A Summer's Ramble in the Rocky Mountains and Beyond

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‏اللغة: English
The Crest of the Continent
A Summer's Ramble in the Rocky Mountains and Beyond

The Crest of the Continent A Summer's Ramble in the Rocky Mountains and Beyond

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 6

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Marshall Pass—Eastern Slope 223 Marshall Pass—Western Slope 227 Crested Butte Mountain and Lake 230 Ruby Falls 232 Approach to the Black Cañon 235 Black Cañon of the Gunnison 241 Currecanti Needle, Black Cañon 247 A Ute Council Fire 251 Ouray 255 Gate of Lodore 261 Winnie’s Grotto 264 Echo Rock 267 Gunnison’s Butte 271 Buttes of the Cross 274 Marble Cañon 279 Grand Cañon of the Colorado 283 Grand Cañon, from To-ro-Wasp 287 Exploring the Walls 292 Castle Gate 297 In Spanish Fork Cañon 300 Tramway in Little Cottonwood Cañon 305 Salt Lake City 311 Mormon Temple, Tabernacle and Assembly Hall 325 Great Salt Lake 331

I
AT THE BASE OF THE ROCKIES.

Old Woodcock says that if Providence had not made him a justice of the peace, he’d have been a vagabond himself. No such kind interference prevailed in my case. I was a vagabond from my cradle. I never could be sent to school alone like other children—they always had to see me there safe, and fetch me back again. The rambling bump monopolized my whole head. I am sure my godfather must have been the Wandering Jew or a king’s messenger. Here I am again, en route, and sorely puzzled to know whither.—The Loiterings of Arthur O’Leary.

“‘There are the Rocky Mountains!’ I strained my eyes in the direction of his finger, but for a minute could see nothing. Presently sight became adjusted to a new focus, and out against a bright sky dawned slowly the undefined shimmering trace of something a little bluer. Still it seemed nothing tangible. It might have passed for a vapor effect of the horizon, had not the driver called it otherwise. Another minute and it took slightly more certain shape. It cannot be described by any Eastern analogy; no other far mountain view that I ever saw is at all like it. If you have seen those sea-side albums which ladies fill with algæ during their summer holiday, and in those albums have been startled, on turning over a page suddenly, to see an exquisite marine ghost appear, almost evanescent in its faint azure, but still a literal existence, which had been called up from the deeps, and laid to rest with infinite delicacy and difficulty,—then you will form some conception of the first view of the Rocky Mountains. It is impossible to imagine them built of earth, rock, anything terrestrial; to fancy them cloven by horrible chasms, or shaggy with giant woods. They

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