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Show 6 34. (539) "thread of biography . . .»: Muir Papers, Box 6; March 9, 1899. (539) Muir's letter to Page: Bade, II, pp. 341-342. (540) "vulgar" and "catchy": Johnson Papers, Dec. 6, 1897; Hadley, p. 622. (540) "be all nature - animated nature": Johnson Papers, Nov. 16, 1899; Hadley, p. 635. (541) "The clearest way . . .": The Wilderness World of John Muir, ed. Edwin Way Teale, p. 312. (541) Muir in textbooks: Kimes #152, 153, 154, 155. (541) "our poor earth bound companions . . .": Muir Papers, Box 17; letter to Mrs. Hooker, June 9, 1909; letter to Mrs. Hanna, May 20, 1910. (542) "walking in wild places . . .": "A New Top Notch . . ."; Kimes #257; in Muir Papers, Box 16. (542) "hardihood, resolution . . .": Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, p. 151. (542) "a mother field mouse . . .": SoMBHY, p. 4. (542) "wee, hairy, sleekit beastie": Stickeen, p. 59. (542) "almost any wild animal . . .": SoMBHY, p. 149. (543) "imprisoned soarer . . .": SoMBHY, p. 40. (543) "Pelican Bay Manuscript": Muir Papers, Box 31. (544) "a sort of foundation . . .": Edward. Henry Harriman, pp. 22-24. (544) Juxtaposed incidents: see Herbert Smith, John_Muir, p. 24. (544) Story of My Boyhood_and_Youth in Atlantic: Kimes #311, 312, 313, 314. |