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Show 604. (Aug. 1877) pp. 449-70. (268) "diverging from their parents . . .": Worster, Nature's Economy, pp. 160-61. (269) "the whole subject is too profound . . .": quoted in Bert James Loewenberg, "The Mosaic of Darwinian Thought," Darwin: ANorton Critical Edition, pp. 217-18. (269) Muir's program of writing: Bade, I, pp. 383-84. (270) "an echo . . .": JoM, p. 165. (270) "The Humming-Bird of the California Water-Falls;" Kimes #74. (270) "Ouzels seem so completely . . .": "The Humming-Bird . . . ," p. 551. (271) "The Douglass Squirrel of California;" Kimes #83. (272) "How blessed it would be . . .": JoM, p. 166. (273) "constituted the best support": William H. Goetzmann, Exploration and Empire (New York: Vintage Books, 1966), p. 42; Hofstadter, Social Darwinism . . . , p. 19. (273) "Wild Sheep of California;" Kimes #23. (274) " . . . the domestic sheep is expressionless . . .": "Wild Sheep . . . ," P- 359. (275) "flowing undulations . . .": "Wild Sheep . . . ," p. 361. (275) "A lithe figure . . .": Therese Yelverton, Zanita: A Tale of Yo-Semite (New York: Hurd and Houghton, 1872), reprinted in ;rn_vnsemite and Beyond, pp. 102-05. (275) "modern deification of survival . . .": quoted in Hofstadter Social Darwinism, p. 201. (276) Man, "the unsatisfiable ememy . . .": "Wild Sheep . . . ," |