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Show 599 Thoreau, "Walking," The Portable Thoreau, ed. Carl Bode (New York: Viking, 1964), p. 592. (224) "Civilization needs pure wildness . . .": Muir Papers, File #30.4. (224) "The West of which I speak . . .": Thoreau, The Portable Thoreau, pp. 609-10. (225) "The world needs the woods . . .": "Flood-Storm . . . ," pp. 495-96. (225) "After one has seen pines . . .": "A Wind Storm in the Forests of the Yuba;" Kimes #81. (227) Thoreau in a tree: Thoreau, The Portable Thoreau, p. 627. (229) "Found In A Storm": with apologies to William Stafford. (229) The essays on Shasta storms: "Shasta in Winter," Kimes #36; "Snow Storm on Mount Shasta," in Harper's, Kimes #70; "Mount Shasta" in Picturesque California, reprinted in Steep Trails, pp. 57-81. (230) "Vide Rain Storm on Mount Yuba:" Muir Papers, File #29.2. (230) "But the next spring . . .": Steep Trails, p. 67. (231) "The ordinary sensations . . .": "Snow Storm on Mount Shasta," p. 529. (232) "The marvelous lavishness . . .": "Snow Storm on Mount Shasta," p. 527. (234) Muir's writing as too subtle: Wolfe, p. 174. (235) Sleeping out-of-doors: TMW, p. 305; Walk Journal, p. 57. (235) "Not like my taking the veil . . .": JoM# P- 439- (236) "fix myself in order to view . . .": "Personal Narrative," The Norton Anthology of American Literature, ed. Ronald |