American Big-Game Hunting 
beyond were mountains piled on mountains; 
and I could see clearly the grand Teton 
range springing up from Jackson’s Lake: 
Mount Hayden, some fourteen thousand feet 
high, with Mount Moran just north of it,— 
Hayden rising majestically from the surface 
of the lake thousands of feet, with sharp 
slopes and walls of bare rock above, and its 
base buried in a darkness of pine and spruce. 
Their snow-covered summits and immense 
glaciers must impress any beholder with a 
strong sense of sublimity. It is said that 
on the summit of one of the Tetons there 
is an inclosure made of rocks several feet 
in height, built by what long-vanished and 
forgotten race of builders no man will ever 
know. 
EF. C. Crocker. 
154 
