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Show 101 sick."J3 this From a11 ings, and human f'e Ll.owsh i.p even for nature of anchcr-e d and the color of the same the one' it be de- deals with nature for a true teaches .rever-ence for the appreciation in the gracefulness of sensation is the to which rock capacity s whe at f i.e Ld before a and is Simila.:r-ly, f21wing , expands irhether beauty. to likely greater compassion for his fellow human be- velop democr-acy is farmer is the experience harvest the never living. colt to man or is me as age lost to the According a who Judy a rine tenths of all the men in the city with whom I have snoken about the farm have exuressed an It is, I thik, eager desire to be farmers. to do really not that ·they wish to be farmers the business 2nd nroduce the fruits of the farm, for of that they know not whereof they speak; but it is that they hear the c211 of their elemental being, they feel the hunger of manhood for its the vast ouen, the £lean of the un first home tainted sky, the odors of the sod, the turmoil and conflict of the body \"i th things, the thrilling revelations wh i.ch the rough tutelage of nature forces on the e xpand Lng acu l L2.ckinc; these, they that the best in life is 2.I'e - - , .i!::14conscious 12.clGng • Fot .) oY'!Y in terns of Judy's article re,resented among the example not J style a but level of back-cto-cthe=Land vrri ters. there that "earning wage s were " v virtues he had associated with JJ1bid• t 34Ibid., p. pp. 604. 607-08. as well, sophistication ::-:e many farmers Furthermore", in content he farming recognized, in the. nation rare for who were insisted that the many would not develop |