Letter from John Muir to [William] Kent, 1908 Feb 6.
Martinez, Feb. 6, 1908[in margin: illegible]Dear Mr Kent:Seeing my name in the tender & deed of the Tamalpais Sequoias was a surprise of the pleasantest kind. This is the best tree-lover's monument that could possibly be found in all the forests of the world. You have done me great honor, &...
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Format: | Text |
Language: | English |
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Scholarly Commons
1908
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Online Access: | https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/5537 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmcl/article/30470/type/native/viewcontent/fullsize.jpg |
Summary: | Martinez, Feb. 6, 1908[in margin: illegible]Dear Mr Kent:Seeing my name in the tender & deed of the Tamalpais Sequoias was a surprise of the pleasantest kind. This is the best tree-lover's monument that could possibly be found in all the forests of the world. You have done me great honor, & I am proud of it. Schools here & there have planted "Muir trees" in their playgrounds, & long ago Asa Gray named several plants for me; the most interesting of which is a sturdy frost-enduring daisy that I discovered on the shore of the Arctic Ocean near Icy Cape; a Sierra peak also & one of the Alaska glaciers bears my name, but these aboriginal woods, barring human action, will outlast them all, even the mountain & glacier. Compared with Sequoia glaciers are young fleeting things, & since the first Sequoia forests lifted their https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/30470/thumbnail.jpg |
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