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 cañon 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 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. 
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' 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 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. 
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. 
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    
    
		
	
	
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