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Show 594. p. 151. (162) "seeming to account . . .": studies, p. 18. (162) "the earth has been fundamentally . . .": Gould, Ever Since Darwin . . . , p. 151. (162) "Since I saw the glaciers . . .": quoted in Edward Lurie, Louis Agassiz: A Life in Science (Chicago: U. of Chicago Press, 1960), p. 99. (162) "The silence of death . . .": Louis Agassiz, Studies on Glaciers, Preceeded by the Discourse of Neuchatel, trans. Albert V. Carozzi (New York: Hafner Pub. Co., 1967), p. 169. (163) "The surface of the earth . . .": Agassiz, Studies on Glaciers, p. 175. (163) "separate the knowable . . .": JoM, p. 108. (164) The Tenaya Glacier: Studies, p. 34. (165) Muir's revised copy of "Exploration . . .": Muir Papers, File #27.15. (166) Agassiz and God's Book: see Essay on Classification, ed. Edward Lurie (Cambridge, Mass.: 1962), p. 37. (167) "The proper METHOD . . .": ABC of Reading (New York: New Directions, 1960), pp. 17-18. (169) Gray's comparison of Agassiz and Darwin: Darwinianna: Essays and Reviews Pertaining to Darwinism, ed. A. Hunter Dupree (Cambridge, Mass.: 1963), p. 16. (170) "[Man] is often obliged . . .": Gray, Lessons in Botany (New York: 1876), p. 495. (171) "When a page is written over . . .": TMW, p. 376. |