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Show 602. (252) "Honorable representatives . . .": TMW, pp. 324-25. (252) "Men and other bipeds . . .»: TMW, p. 356. (252) " . . . civilized calamities . . .": TMW, p. 313. (253) The English Garden: Worster, Nature's Economy, p. 178. (253) Muir's library: see Hadley, p. 255. (254) "When charmed . . .": Herman Melville, The Confidence Man. ed. H. Bruce Franklin (1857; rpt. New York: Bobbs- Merrill, 1967), p. 267. (255) "Killed a rattlesnake . . .": JoM, p. 28. (255) Muir on rattlesnakes: "In the San Gabriel," Kimes #72; "Amongst the Animals of the Yosemite," Kimes #222; "The Snakes of Fresno," Kimes #A6. (255) "When we came across a tarantula . . .": Gifford Pinchot, Breaking New Ground (New York" Harcourt Brace, 1947), p. 103. (255) Albert Fall, snake killer: Robert Shankland, Steve Mather of the National Parks (New York: Knopf, 1951), p. 219. (256) Emerson's view of Nature: F.O. Matthiessen, American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman (New York: Oxford U. Press, 1941), pp. 160-61. (256) "He informed me . . .": Nathaniel Hawthorne, The English Notebooks, ed. Randall Stewart (New York: M.L.A., 1941), p. 433; Nov. 20, 1856. (257) LeConte on God: Evolution and itsRelation to Religious^ Thought (New York: D. Appleton, 1888), pp. 279, 285, 313. (258) Muir on Evolution: "Three Days with John Muir," World's Work (March 1909) pp. 11355-56. |