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Show 583. (Los Angeles: Guild of Tutors Press, 1978), p. 53. (71) "Imagination, however, must be strictly checked . ,": John Tyndall, Hours of Exercise in the Alps (New York: 1871), p. 230. (71) Muir on Imagination: JoM, p. 226. (72) "You'll find me rough . . .": Bade, I, p. 325. (72) "A Geologist's Winter Walk," Kimes #20; reprinted in Steep Trails, pp. 19-28. I use this version. (75) "No plushy bought . . .": Steep Trails, p. 22. (76) "Not one of all the assembled rocks . . .": Steep Trails, p. 28. (77) "Much as I enjoy . . .": Hours of Exercise in the Alps, p. 11. (77) Tyndall's gift of a barometer: James Mitchell Clarke, The Life and Adventures of John Muir (San Diego: The Word Shop, 1979), p. 108. (78) "[We] live with our heels . . .": Muir Papers, File #37.14; To Yosemite and Beyond, p. 57. (79) "In the woods . . .": Whicher, p. 24. (79) Emerson's abstract version of Nature, and William Elery Channing's analysis of it: see F.O. Mattheissen, American Renaissance: Art and Expression_in the Age of Emerson and Whitman (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941), pp. 160-61. (79) "Sponge steeped in immortality": "Rambles of a Botanist . p. 768. (79) "Emerson observes: . . .": "Introduction," The Wilderness World of John Muir, ed. Edwin Way Teale (Boston: Houghton |