Aug. 23rd: On east end of Trumbull sketching the toro- 
weap . 
Aug. 24th: Rode over to the summit of Mount Logan with 
Captain Dutton; afterwards to Oak Springs. 
Aug. 25th: Visited Hurricane Ledge and a number of vol- 
canic cones. Everywhere encountered graves and pottery fragments . 
Aug. 26th and 27th: On geological studies. 
Aug. 28th: Went down to the Grand Canyon. Got a glimpse 
of the magnificent spectacle and hurried back* there being no water 
within reach. 
Aug. 29th: Climbed Mount Emma and made panoramas . 
Aug. 30th: Again on Mount Logan. 
Aug. 31st: On Hurricane Ledge. Started on a three days 
trip to the Grand Canyon. 
Sept. 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th: Made sketches in camp. Spent 
several days about the rim of the canyon. 
( Two pages of the note book lost). 
The sun had set behind the walls of the Grand Canyon, leav- 
ing the sky a wall of murky crimson. The winds arose and swept 
along the ledge behind the great pines. Before a group of cycle- 
pean buttes seamed and pinnacled lifted their heads from the 
silent, somber depths into the light. Beyond a space lay 
in gloom, whose depth and width no man would dare to guess, rises 
a giant wall oi dense red. Beyond this the shadows crept across 
the broad cliff broken plains; and the shadows of the world, dark 
and blue, crept up the orange sky. 
Sept. 17th: Left camp and set out for the Kaibab plateau. 
