In the Catskills eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 208 pages of information about In the Catskills.

In the Catskills eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 208 pages of information about In the Catskills.
looked surprisingly near; in the heart of the northern Catskills a wild valley was seen flooded with sunlight.  Then the curtain ran down again, and nothing was left but the gray strip of rock to which we clung, plunging down into the obscurity.  Down and down we made our way.  Then the fog lifted again.  It was Jack and his beanstalk renewed; new wonders, new views, awaited us every few moments, till at last the whole valley below us stood in the clear sunshine.  We passed down a precipice, and there was a rill of water, the beginning of the creek that wound through the valley below; farther on, in a deep depression, lay the remains of an old snow-bank; Winter had made his last stand here, and April flowers were springing up almost amid his very bones.  We did not find a palace, and a hungry giant, and a princess, at the end of our beanstalk, but we found a humble roof and the hospitable heart of Mrs. Larkins, which answered our purpose better.  And we were in the mood, too, to have undertaken an eating-bout with any giant Jack ever discovered.

Of all the retreats I have found amid the Catskills, there is no other that possesses quite so many charms for me as this valley, wherein stands Larkins’s humble dwelling; it is so wild, so quiet, and has such superb mountain views.  In coming up the valley, you have apparently reached the head of civilization a mile or more lower down; here the rude little houses end, and you turn to the left into the woods.  Presently you emerge into a clearing again, and before you rises the rugged and indented crest of Panther Mountain, and near at hand, on a low plateau, rises the humble roof of Larkins,—­you get a picture of the Panther and of the homestead at one glance.  Above the house hangs a high, bold cliff covered with forest, with a broad fringe of blackened and blasted tree-trunks, where the cackling of the great pileated woodpecker may be heard; on the left a dense forest sweeps up to the sharp spruce-covered cone of the Wittenberg, nearly four thousand feet high, while at the head of the valley rises Slide over all.  From a meadow just back of Larkins’s barn, a view may be had of all these mountains, while the terraced side of Cross Mountain bounds the view immediately to the east.  Running from the top of Panther toward Slide one sees a gigantic wall of rock, crowned with a dark line of fir.  The forest abruptly ends, and in its stead rises the face of this colossal rocky escarpment, like some barrier built by the mountain gods.  Eagles might nest here.  It breaks the monotony of the world of woods very impressively.

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In the Catskills from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.