Happy nowadays is the tourist, with
earth’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.
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 Canon of the Colorado, which, naturally
the hardest to reach, has now become, by a branch
of the Santa Fe, the most accessible of all.
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’s power to spoil-the
ocean, the two icy ends of the globe, and the Grand
Canon.
When I first heard of the Santa Fe
trains running to the edge of the Grand Canon 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.
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-the
side-canons, 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’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.
But it is impossible to conceive what
the canon 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’s most extravagant expectations are indefinitely
surpassed, though one expect much from what is said
of it as “the biggest chasm on earth”-“so
big is it that all other big things,-Yosemite,
the Yellowstone, the Pyramids, Chicago,-all
would be lost if tumbled into it.” Naturally
enough, illustrations as to size are sought for among
other canons like or unlike it, with the common result
of worse confounding confusion. The prudent keep
silence. It was once said that the “Grand
Canon could put a dozen Yosemites in its vest pocket.”
The justly famous Grand Canon 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’s
canon 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 Canon 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 canon 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’s
Rest. These colossal cliffs, types of permanence,
are about three thousand and six thousand feet high;
those of the canon 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 canon
company, would draw every eye, and, in serene majesty,
“aboon them a’” she would take her
place-castle, temple, palace, or tower.
Nevertheless a noted writer, comparing the Grand Canon
in a general way with the glacial Yosemite, says:
“And the Yosemite-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.” 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. “And
the lark-ah, the lovely lark! Dumped
down the red, royal gorge of the eagle, it would be
hard to find.” Each in its own place is
better, singing at heaven’s gate, and sailing
the sky with the clouds.
Every feature of nature’s big
face is beautiful,-height and hollow, wrinkle,
furrow, and line,-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.
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 canons of every color, sheer-walled and deep,
all of which seem to be represented in this one grand
canon of canons.
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’s greatest wonders even if, like
ordinary canons 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-alcoves,
cirques, amphitheaters, and side-canons-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.
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.
In trying to describe the great pines
and séquoias 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.
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’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 “a’
through ither,” 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.
Throughout this vast extent of wild
architecture-nature’s own capital
city-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.
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.
Of all the various kinds of ornamental
work displayed,-carving, tracery on cliff-faces,
moldings, arches, pinnacles,-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-canons, 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’s own mountain buildings
wasting in glory of high desert air-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,-as
in the flowers of a prairie after fire,-but
here the very dust and ashes are beautiful.
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,-in all their dimensions some
are greater,-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 canon 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-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 canon-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’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.
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-perhaps
until the cook cries “Breakfast!” or the
stable-boy “Horses are ready!” 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.
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 canon. The nearest of them, three or four
miles east and west, are McNeil’s Point and
Rowe’s Point; the latter, besides commanding
the eternally interesting canon, gives wide-sweeping
views southeast and west over the dark forest roof
to the San Francisco and Mount Trumbull volcanoes-the
bluest of mountains over the blackest of level woods.
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
“points of interest.” The verge anywhere,
everywhere, is a point of interest beyond one’s
wildest dreams.
As yet, few of the promontories or
throng of mountain buildings in the canon 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’s Plateau, and Grand View
Point, Point Sublime, Bissell and Moran points, the
Temple of Set, Vishnu’s Temple, Shiva’s
Temple, Twin Temples, Tower of Babel, Hance’s
Column-these fairly good names given by
Dutton, Holmes, Moran, and others are scattered over
a large stretch of the canon wilderness.
All the canon 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 canon is like from descriptions and pictures.
Powell’s and Dutton’s descriptions present
magnificent views not only of the canon but of all
the grand region round about it; and Holmes’s
drawings, accompanying Dutton’s report, are
wonderfully good. Surely faithful and loving skill
can go no further in putting the multitudinous decorated
forms on paper. But the colors, the living,
rejoicing colors, 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.
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 Canon 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 canon 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.
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.
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 canon like a sea. Still deeper,
richer, more divine grow the great walls and temples,
until in the supreme flaming glory of sunset the whole
canon 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.
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 canon clouds are born.
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 canon, opposite
the hotel, is a little tributary of the Colorado called
Bright Angel Creek. A fountain-cloud still better
deserves the name “Angel of the Desert Wells”-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-stones, tons in weight, hurrying
away as if frightened, showing something of the way
Grand Canon work is done. Most of the fertile
summer clouds of the canon 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 canon in flocks, turning aside here
and there, lingering as if studying the needs of particular
spots, exploring side-canons, 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.
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
canon 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 canon, 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.
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 “cloudbursts”;
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.
During the winter months snow falls
over all the high plateau, usually to a considerable
depth, whitening the rim and the roofs of the canon
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 canon 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 canon 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 canon, and swirling
in magnificent eddies along the sides. Gradually
the hearty swarms closed their ranks, and all the
canon 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 canon of Bright Angel Creek, inclosing a sunlit
mass of the canon 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.
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 canon 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-the mingling of silver-capped
rock, sunshine, and cloud.
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 canons 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, “fear
nothing but fear”-not without reason,
for these canon 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.
To the mountaineer the depth of the
canon, 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.
The most striking and characteristic
part of this widely varied vegetation are the cactaceae-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. Cereus giganteus, 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
Yucca baccata, with beautiful lily-flowers and
sweet banana-like fruit, prized by the Indians, is
common along the canon rim, growing on lean, rocky
soil beneath mountain-mahogany, nut-pines, and junipers,
beside dense flowery mats of Spiraea caespitosa
and the beautiful pinnate-leaved Spiraea millefolium.
The nut-pine, Pinus edulis, scattered along
the upper slopes and roofs of the canon 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.
To civilized people from corn and
cattle and wheat-field countries the canon 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 canon,
scattered along both sides from top to bottom and
throughout its entire length, built of stone and mortar
in seams and fissures like swallows’ 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-most romantic of
sky-gardens, but eloquent of hard times.
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 canon 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.
The largest of the canon 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.
Deer also are occasionally met in
the canon, 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-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.
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-the black-headed
grosbeak, robin, bluebird, Townsend’s thrush,
and many warblers, sailing the sky and enlivening the
rocks and bushes through all the canon wilderness.
Here at Hance’s river camp or
a few miles above it brave Powell and his brave men
passed their first night in the canon 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-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-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 canons, the beginning of the system
culminating in this grand canon of canons.
Our warm canon 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-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.
The so-called Grand Colorado Plateau,
of which the Grand Canon 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 canon 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,-blackened with lava-flows,
dotted with volcanoes and beautiful buttes, and lined
with long continuous escarpments,-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.
Walking quietly about in the alleys
and byways of the Grand Canon 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 canon grows wider and deeper. So also do
the side-canons 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.
Every building is seen to be a remnant
of once continuous beds of sediments-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 canon, 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 Canon 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’s auld
lang syne, more widely opened, or displayed in
higher piles. The whole canon 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-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-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.