John Muir and the Ice That Started a Fire: How a Visionary and the Glaciers of Alaska Changed America

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John Muir and the Ice That Started a Fire: How a Visionary and the Glaciers of Alaska Changed America Page 23

by Heacox, Kim


  Chapter Nine

  125: “the most velvety . . . ever saw.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 280.

  125: “To him I owe . . . of my life.” Gifford, John Muir: His Life and Letters and Other Writings, 861.

  126: “Only after Merriam . . . national figure.” Goetzmann and Sloan, Looking Far North, 10–11.

  126: “Ornithologist and Author . . . Author and Student of Glaciers.” Litwin, The Harriman Alaska Expedition Retraced, 260.

  127: “Cold Storage Muir . . . playground . . . on the subject.” Lord, Green Alaska, 15–17.

  127: “George W. Roller.” Goetzmann and Sloan, Looking Far North, 33.

  127: “floating university.” Lord, Green Alaska, xvi.

  128: “All along . . . a place of promise.” Ibid., xvi–xvii.

  128: “Big Four . . . Little Two . . . Admiral.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 281.

  129: “. . . you naughty bad boy . . . anymore.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 303.

  129: “Kill as few . . . Nature’s harmony.” Ibid., 363.

  130: “Whatever they are today . . . ought to do.” Grinnell, Alaska 1899: Essays from the Harriman Expedition, 154.

  130–31: “Well, are you . . . if I do.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 281.

  131: “You ought to . . . on the Hudson.” Ibid.

  131: “He is as modest . . . gifted.” Carr and Muir, Kindred and Related Spirits, 166.

  131: “an age of . . . of success.” Goetzmann and Sloan, Looking Far North, xi–xii.

  131: “A fearful smell . . . themselves canned.” Lord, Green Alaska, 77.

  131: “Seaweed Saunders.” Goetzmann and Sloan, Looking Far North, 45.

  132: “dirty, miserable.” Ibid., 46.

  133: “bicycle suits.” Ibid., 58.

  133: “a nest of ants . . . by a stick.” Ibid., 56.

  133: “ribs of the earth.” Ibid., 61.

  134: “Alaska’s grandeur . . . will be enormous . . . . finest first.” Brinkley, The Quiet World, 47.

  134: “new kind of Niagara.” Catton, Land Reborn, 37.

  135: “Howling Valley.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 282.

  138: “all the howling.” Ibid.

  138: “The comforts of . . . his control.” Lord, Green Alaska, 136–37.

  138: “No bears, no bears . . . servants done?” Ibid., 52.

  139: “wild to get on . . . from the steamer.” Goetzmann and Sloan, Looking Far North, 85.

  139: “every little fish pond.” Ibid., 110.

  142: “mother and child.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 284.

  143: “the most barren and . . . its size.” Goetzmann & Sloan, Looking Far North, 137.

  143: “I don’t . . . scenery.” Lord, Green Alaska, 151.

  143–44: “I never cared . . . and happier.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 362.

  144: “did not accept . . . conservation movement.” Ibid., 362–63.

  144: “an entire success.” Goetzmann and Sloan, Looking Far North, 171.

  145: “Gilbert’s work . . . and others.” Ibid., 206.

  Chapter Ten

  147: “an assault on . . . order.” Morris, Theodore Rex, 4.

  147: “If it had . . . him first.” Ibid.

  147: “practicing fearlessness.” Ibid., 6.

  147: “Experiences had . . . fellows.” Ibid.

  148: “By then he was producing . . .” Morris, Theodore Rex, 6.

  148: “freshness, spontaneity . . . from the false.” Brinkley, The Wilderness Warrior, 184–85.

  148–49: “Though chiefly . . . with him.” Ibid., 186.

  149: “This cannot last . . . of the victims.” Ibid., 187.

  150: “an extremely dangerous man.” Morris, Theodore Rex, 227.

  150–51: “Every man . . . of the laws.” Ibid., 221.

  151: “I don’t know . . . who come after you.” Ibid., 225–26.

  151: “air of the ridiculous.” Ibid., 227.

  151: “There is nothing . . . Euphrates.” Ibid.

  151: “were the rightful . . . American people.” Brinkley, The Wilderness Warrior, 535.

  152: “I do not want . . . with you.” Ibid., 543.

  152: “It is only . . . get lost.” Fox, John Muir and His Legacy, 125.

  152: “Now . . . out of school.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 181.

  153: “ideal training . . . murder business.” Brinkley, The Wilderness Warrior, 544.

  153: “Mr. Roosevelt . . . you’re right.” Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, 139.

  153: “Muir had an . . . planet in peril.” Brinkley, The Wilderness Warrior, 337.

  154: “Disturbing as . . . society and nature.” Stoll, The Great Delusion, 5.

  155: “This is . . . anything.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 292.

  155: “We slept . . . I wanted.” Ibid., 293.

  155: “John Muir talked . . . without a tent.” Fox, John Muir and His Legacy, 126.

  156: “Goodbye, John . . . my life!” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 293.

  156: “I never before . . . love with him.” Fox, John Muir and His Legacy, 126.

  156: “I stuffed him . . . thieves.” Brinkley, The Wilderness Warrior, 543.

  156: “We are not . . . through the ages.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 294.

  158: “huge yellow . . . paintings.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 378.

  158: “I’m still alive . . . and all.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 296.

  158: “the tallest . . . have seen.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 379.

  158: “indomitable birch.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 296.

  158: “never seemed to think . . . bother him.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 380.

  159: “I feel alive . . . be free . . .” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 297.

  159: “There are . . . before I die.” Ibid.

  159: “had once befriended . . . with the public.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 346.

  160: “Would you . . . children?” Ibid., 383.

  163: “Going around . . . been different.” Ibid., 385–86.

  164: “a noble . . . earthquake.” Muir, The Yosemite, 78.

  165: “She had learned . . . mountain joy.” Ehrlich, John Muir: Nature’s Visionary, 204.

  165: “get out . . . woman can.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 393.

  Chapter Eleven

  169: “Not in history . . . are all gone.” London in Collier’s magazine, 5/5/1906.

  170: “The glory . . . out of my ears . . .” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 309.

  170: “. . . after making about . . . even Yosemite.” Ibid.

  170: “Finding her . . . company.” Ibid., 309–10.

  171: “O dear . . . up a canon.” John Muir letter to daughters Helen and Wanda, 1/15/1906.

  171: “I hope sincerely . . . in my power.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 400.

  171: “They all . . . sound substantial irrefragable ignorance.” John Muir letter to T. Roosevelt, 9/9/1907.

  171: “nine tenths or more.” John Muir letter to T. Roosevelt, 9/9/1907.

  171–72: “and I have been . . . silver firs.” Fox, John Muir and His Legacy, 140.

  172: “promises to be the worst ever.” Ibid.

  172: “mischief-makers and robbers of every degree.” Ibid., 141.

  172: “John Muir loves the Sierras . . . quibbling.” Ibid.

  173: “made an ironic . . . work.” Ibid., 139.

  173: “In all forestry . . . Gifford Pinchot.” Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, 163.
r />   173: “He could squeeze . . . heard of.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 310.

  175: “began his career . . . of God superior . . .” Ibid., 316.

  175: “Never mind, dear Colby . . . to ourselves.” Ibid., 314.

  175: “A dam! . . . damning himself.” Ibid., 323.

  175: “attacks more violent than before.” Ibid., 325.

  176: “It is all . . . than the materialist.” New York Times, 12/5/1909.

  176: “Pinchot spoke for . . . public opinion.” Fox, John Muir and His Legacy, 121.

  176: “there has been . . . magazine articles.” Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, 168.

  176: “hoggish and mushy esthetes.” Ibid., 169.

  176: “short-haired women and long-haired men.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 433.

  177: “I’ve . . . bondage . . .” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 319.

  179: “I wonder . . . falling.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 440.

  179: “vanish . . . other America.” Ibid., 441.

  179: “like the skin of an elephant.” Ibid., 445.

  180: “hot continents.” Ibid., 446.

  180: “the great thundering crystal world.” Muir, Travels in Alaska, 353.

  181: “No one of substantial fortune . . . to the other side.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 452.

  181: “Grand scenery . . . some of it.” Fox, John Muir and His Legacy, 144.

  181: “God invented . . . immense.” Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, 179.

  181: “It is hard to bear.” John Muir letter to Vernon Kellogg, 12/27/1913.

  181: “desolation work.” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 460.

  182: “cult of the self.” Hedges, Death of the Liberal Class, 7.

  182: “California and Alaska . . . of things . . .” Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir, 458.

  182: “no trace of pessimism . . . fatigue.” Wolfe, Son of the Wilderness, 345.

  185: “robbery.” Goetzmann and Sloan, Looking Far North, 165.

  185: “The long . . . surely come.” John Muir New Year’s letter to R. U. Johnson, 1/1/1914.

  186: “The most . . . public protest . . .” Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, 181.

  Chapter Twelve

  189: “forget everything . . . over again.” Oreskes, The Rejection of Continental Drift, 313.

  189: “strongly reminiscent . . .” Catton, Land Reborn, 45.

  189: “Cooper studied . . . in Glacier Bay.” Ibid., 45–46.

  190: “in three . . . exceedingly modest.” Ibid.

  191: “In the first case . . . to the idea.” Ibid., 50.

  191–92: “A MONSTROUS . . . faddists . . . ask him about.” Bohn, Glacier Bay: The Land and the Silence, 92–94.

  192: “I can show . . . dust.” Eliot, The Waste Land, line 30.

  193: “Tell me . . . life?” Oliver, New and Selected Poems, 94.

  193: “Thousands of . . . a necessity . . .” Muir, Our National Parks, 1.

  193: “I owe . . . a mere gypsy.” Fox, John Muir and His Legacy, 121.

  194: “I got my money . . . acknowledgment.” Ibid., 146.

  194: “Without parks . . . our nation young.” Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, 189.

  194: “Was there ever a time . . . forsaken?” Ibid.

  194: “many of the attributes . . . civilization.” Meine, Aldo Leopold: His Life and Work, 244.

  195: “without giving so much . . . keeping them alive?” Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind, 188.

  195: “I am glad . . . on the map?” Ibid., 189.

  196: “And over and above . . . But not always.” Bohn, Glacier Bay: The Land and the Silence, 85.

  197: “Dear Bill . . . Tom Smith.” Ibid.

  197–98: “Analysis of the . . . left to rot.’” Catton, Land Reborn, 174.

  198: “legalized rape of Glacier Bay.” Ibid., 175.

  198: “I do not think . . . are shut out.” Ibid., 53.

  198: “The Place is Alaska—the Business is Mining.” Beach, Cosmopolitan, January 1936.

  198: “is absolutely barren . . . parties.” Bohn, Glacier Bay: The Land and the Silence, 94.

  199: “utterly wrong.” Ibid.

  199: “If Congress . . . Park Service.” Ibid., 95.

  199–200: “In the reservoir . . . ingenuity.” Fox, John Muir and His Legacy, 146.

  200: “seems a comprehensive mistake.” Ibid.

  201: “We had to get it right. . .” William E Brown, in conversation with author Kim Heacox.

  Epilogue

  204: “Muir lit the torch . . . so special.” Schwarzenegger, Arnold. MSNBC News Service Report: Feb. 1, 2005.

  204–5: “All through history . . . is alive.” Lyon, “John Muir, the Physiology of the Brain, and the ‘Wilderness Experience,’” 27–30.

  206: “Even if we stopped . . . rising seas.” Folger, National Geographic, Sept. 2013, 40.

  206: “will require . . . and personal expectations.” Gilding, The Great Disruption, 97.

  207: “Newscasters . . . relations.” Pipher, The Green Boat, 62.

  207: “People avoid facing . . . solve.” Ibid., 3.

  208: “a 1,700-mile fuse . . . on the continent.” McKibben, “The Keystone Pipeline Revolt,” 1.

  209: “October 2012 . . . astronomical.” Jensen, “The Victim Liked It,” 11.

  209: “Many of our . . . we are . . . planet.’” Klein, “Capitalism vs. the Climate,” 6.

  210: “Through his visionary . . . our generation.” Pope, Scottish Government, April 9, 2010.

  211: “the machinery of our wits.” Oliver, “Of Power and Time,” Blue Pastures, 1.

  212: “happily rich.” Engberg and Merrell, Letters from Alaska, 94.

  212: “defrauding.” Ibid.

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