Songs of the Rockies . THE EGERTON-PALMER PRESS Estes Park, - Colorado All rights reserved Copyright 1914By Charles Edwin Hewes AUG 21 1914 There is but one In all this worldWho hath my soul Most tender stirred;And these wild songs. Writ the peaks among,I, as flowers Proffed by a at the feet Of that One, my Mother;And next to her. My. dear beloved Brother. C. E. H. Elkanah Valley,Estes Park,April II. 1914. VII THE Longs Peak oberlandt and the region close-ly associated with it, includes both slopes ofthe Front Range of the Rocky Mountains,from the Arapahoes on the south


Songs of the Rockies . THE EGERTON-PALMER PRESS Estes Park, - Colorado All rights reserved Copyright 1914By Charles Edwin Hewes AUG 21 1914 There is but one In all this worldWho hath my soul Most tender stirred;And these wild songs. Writ the peaks among,I, as flowers Proffed by a at the feet Of that One, my Mother;And next to her. My. dear beloved Brother. C. E. H. Elkanah Valley,Estes Park,April II. 1914. VII THE Longs Peak oberlandt and the region close-ly associated with it, includes both slopes ofthe Front Range of the Rocky Mountains,from the Arapahoes on the south to Flat Top on thenorth, including the connecting Mummy and MedicineBow ranges and the Continental Divide to the RabbitEars. Seen from Estes Park and the Great Plains on theeast, and from the floors and west rims of Middle andNorth Parks, the great mountain appears as a hugecentral mass supported by vast ranges on the north andsouth. In reality, the peak is on a short spur range amile east of the Continental Divide, but this separat-ing distance is so slight as to be imperceptible whenthe range is viewed en masse. Two of the four large intersta


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