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Show 584. Mifflin, 1954) , p. xi. (80) "Winter blows the fog . . .": JQM, p. 190. (80) "Now we observe . . .": JoM, p. 138. (82) "Darwin's mean ungodly word . . .": Bade, I, p. 380. (82) "the two major advances . . .": quoted in Roderick Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind (New Haven: Yale U. Press, 1967), pp. 193-94. (83) "more intensive scientific reconnaisances . . .": William H. Goetzmann, Exploration and Empire: The Explorer and the Scientist in the Winning of the American West (New York: Random House, 1966), pp. xiii-xiv. (84) "programmed" exploration: Goetzmann, Exploration and Empire, p. xi. (85) Galen Clark: see Shirley Sargent, Galen Clark: Yosemite Guardian (San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1964), pp. 52, 81-85. (85) "Go east . . . earth hath no sorrows . . .": JoM, p. 99. (86) "Scenes Among the Glaciers' Beds," in "Yosemite Glaciers;" Kimes #2. (86) "first fruits": The Living Glaciers of California;" Kimes #14. Also LtF, pp. 135-137; Oct. 8, 1872. (87) The Harper's version: "Living Glaciers of California;" Kimes #52. (88) ". . .the pearly band of summits . . .": "Living Glaciers," p. 770. (89) "A series of rugged zig-zags . . .": "Living Glaciers," p. 772. |