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Show 636 (560) "a few days' saunter . . .": FSIS, p. 103. (560) "Our education has-been sadly neglected . . .": FSIS, p. 106. (561) "not a whit more natural . . .": FSIS, p. 304. (561) The party of travellers: FSIS, p. 138. (561) "mysterious things": Muir Papers, Box 31. (562) "bound by clocks . . .": FSIS, p. 250. (562) "little influenced by its novel grandeur . . .": FSIS, p. 255. (562) Professor Butler's influence on Muir is discussed in Hadley, pp. 109-13. (563) "the natural and common . . .": FSIS, p. 256. (563) "Wherever we go in the mountains . . .": FSIS, p. 251. (566) "eternal song of creation": FSIS, p. 171. (566) "every crystal, every flower . . .": FSIS, p. 205. (567) "another version of the snowy Sierra": FSIS, p. 177. (567) "drawing earth and sky together": FSIS, p. 326. (367) "No feature . . .": FSIS, p. 336. (568) Muir's letter to his brother: Huntington Library, FAC 625 (11); Sept. 22, 1869. (568) "in our best times . . .": FSIS, p. 336. (569) "Winter and summer . . .": MoC, p. 59. (569) "How delightful . . .": FSIS, p. 338. (569) "The charms of these mountains . . .": FSIS_, p. 34 7, |