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Show 592. (146) The critic and philosopher: Phillip Wheelwright, Heraclitus (New York: Atheneum, 1964), p. 13. (146) "most of the words . . .": Bade, II, p. 7. (147) The "vitalist" point of view: Donald Worster, Nature's Economy, p. 378. (±4-7f^"one vast undulated wave . . .": Studies, p. 3. (148) "only developed . . .": Studies, p. 16. (149) "in Sierra architecture . . .": Studies, p. 15. (149) "'He hath builded . . .'": Studies, p. 5. (149) "Nature is not so poor . . .": Studies, p. 21. (150) "Domes appear . . .": Muir Papers, File #27.16. (150) "No Accidents or Caprice . . .": Alphonso Wood, Classbook of Botany (New York: 1861), p. 8. (150) "the ripening . . .": Studies, p. 15. (150) "While the snowflowers . . .": JoM, p. 90. (150) "The beautiful conoid . . .": I quote the original version, Muir Papers, File #27.16; revised in Studies, pp. 8-9. (151) "In all this sublime fulfillment . . .": Studies, p. 100. (151) The two fragments from Heraclitus: Wheelwright, Heraclitus, pp. 98, 116. (152) "It is hard . . .": King, Mountaineering . . . , p. 304. (152) "Glaciers move in tides . . .": JoM, p. 89. (152) Muir's perceptions from the Owens Valley: JoM, p. 188. (153) " . . . to me a mountain is a Buddha . . .": Jack Kerouac, Dharma Bums (New York: 1958), p. 54. (153) "When we thoroughly study . . .": Dogen, "Treasury of the |