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Show 620. (417) "This was the most sublime waterfall flood . . .": "Treasures . . . ," p. 500. (420) Muir as "publicizer": see Nash, Wilderness and_the American Mind. Chapter 8, pp. 122-140. (422) "Most people who visit Yosemite . . .": "Features . . . ," pp. 663-64. (423) "The Tuolumne Canon . . .": Bade, II, p. 244. (424) "The members had never heard . . .": Johnson, Remembered Yesterdays, p. 228. (425) "I think you might call . . .": Muir Papers, box 3; May 1, 1891. (425) Johnson's pressure on Muir: Muir Papers, Box 3; July 22, 1891. (426) "My stock of cliff and cascade adjectives . . .": Johnson Papers, July 14, 1891; in Hadley, p. 547. (426) "I fear you will find . . .": Johnson Papers, August 15, 1891; in Hadley, p. 549. (427) "this new yosemite is longer and deeper . . .": "A Rival . . . ," p. 77. (427) "It is upward of a mile in height . . .": "A Rival . . . ," p. 82. (429) "At first sight it would seem . . .": "A Rival . . . ," p. 88. (430) Noble's recommendation: Bade, II, p. 254. (430) "soft, succulent people . . .": "A Rival . . . ," p. 95. (430) "But if instead of crossing . . .": "A Rival . . . ," p. 79. |