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Show 575. NOTES FOR CHAPTER I : THE MACHINE AND THE FLOWER (1) "I wish I knew where I was going . . . " : LtF, p. 32. (August 30, 1867) . (1) "The folks t h i n k i t funny . . . " : Muir Papers, Box 1; Nov. 18, 1860. (2) "In case a n y t h i n g . . . " : Huntington, FAC 625 (11), Sept. 7, 1867. (2) Manuscript Notebook of A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf, Yosemite N a t i o n a l Park Archives, F i l e #9161. Referred to as Walk J o u r n a l. (3) "conventional or t r a d i t i o n a l man . . . " : R.W.B. Lewis, The American A d " " Tnnnnanae. Tragedy, and T r a d i t i on in the N i n e t e e n t h Century (Chicago: U. of Chicago Press, 1955), p. 23. (3) Thoreau a f t e r Walden: see Donald Worster, Nature's Economy: The Roots of Ecology (San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1977), pp. 89-97. (6) Muir's i n v e n t i o n s : SoMBHY, pp. 192-222; Wolfe, pp. 65-66. (6) ". . . t h e r e a l good of mankind in g e n e r a l " : LtF, p . A; Jan. 21, 1866. (6) "To what end . . .": Huntingto-o^rn,, VFAACC 6622b5 (U11H),, Dec. 20, 1863 n\ mv. * „mnM - see Lewis Mumford, The Myth of (') The meaning of machines, see the Machine: the ~Pe nti.a go„n« oo-fF PPoowweerr v( New York: Harcourt |