OF SOUTH CAROLINA. 293 
At Table Rock, they will be in the hands of the veteran guide, Mr. Sunderland, with whom I will 
leave them, with the assurance, that however high conceptions they may have formed of this noble 
rock, they will not be disappointed. From the rock to Mr. Barton’s hospitable abode, is but a 
short distance, and from this point, the wild scenery of the Estatoe Mountains must be visited. After 
this, they will receive a hearty welcome from the Kennys, who will conduct them to the celebrated 
Jocassa valley. They will see here, on the tops of the mountains, forming vast walls, an extension 
of the stratum seen at Table Rock. The White water, meeting with this in its course, and tired of 
the slow process of cutting a channel through it, fairly clears it ata bound, forming one of the finest 
water falls of the South. 'Tomassie, and the quiet scenery of Pickens, may close the ramble, as they 
turn their faces homeward, their minds, I trust, filled with pleasant remembrances of this most beau- 
tiful region. 
