296 In Touch with Nature. 



outcrops, and at places there are masses of it now 

 resting upon the side of the cliff that suggest the 

 roofs of just such caves or rock-shelters as I have 

 described. Certainly this is true of the east side 

 of the cave we explored, and what treasures may- 

 forever be hidden there ! How I longed to lift the 

 huge rock-masses and peep beneath ! But why 

 worry ? There is many another such place in the 

 valley of the Delaware, and the work of recover- 

 ing the past, of placing the Lenni Lenape where 

 he belongs in Indian history, is far from completion. 

 It is not a long walk from where I stand by this 

 cave in a shale outcrop to one of grand propor- 

 tions in limestone rock that has long been known. 

 Along the river-shore the well-defined boundaries 

 of Pechot-woklenk can yet be traced, and its 

 prominent feature is the huge cavern, a consider- 

 able part of which is still intact. In Indian times, 

 this cave " had a total length of about three hun- 

 dred feet, an average height of twelve, and a 

 breadth varying from ten to forty feet." The cave 

 in its natural state was divided into three compart- 

 ments or levels, and each reached by descending 

 a short and slippery incline of at least ten feet. 



