Letter from S. Hall Young to John Muir, 1910 Jun 14.

Cordova, Alaska;June 14th, 1910.John Muir, Martinez, Cal.,My dear Friend,Yours of May 31st came by the last steamer and I reply by its return. I am sincerely sorry if I made a mistake in the facts of the climb. I aimed to be absolutely truthful in the story as far as my memory goes. And still, while...

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Main Author: Young, S. Hall
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Scholarly Commons 1910
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/5039
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/6055/viewcontent/muir19_0505_let.pdf
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spelling ftunivpacificdc:oai:scholarlycommons.pacific.edu:muir-correspondence-6055 2023-10-01T03:56:07+02:00 Letter from S. Hall Young to John Muir, 1910 Jun 14. Young, S. Hall 1910-06-14T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/5039 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/6055/viewcontent/muir19_0505_let.pdf eng eng Scholarly Commons https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/5039 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/6055/viewcontent/muir19_0505_let.pdf Some letters written to John Muir may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user. John Muir Correspondence (PDFs) Environmentalist naturalist travel conservation national parks John Muir history correspondence letters text 1910 ftunivpacificdc 2023-09-02T22:34:51Z Cordova, Alaska;June 14th, 1910.John Muir, Martinez, Cal.,My dear Friend,Yours of May 31st came by the last steamer and I reply by its return. I am sincerely sorry if I made a mistake in the facts of the climb. I aimed to be absolutely truthful in the story as far as my memory goes. And still, while acknowledging that you must be correct in the matter of our not crossing the glacier on the way up because--well, because you are you, I cannot make my recollection of it come other than as I told it. You should have felt at liberty to make the correction.I did not see George Wharton James's article on the subject, but I know James and his tendency to get facts mixed. He knew my purpose to publish the story, and should not have "butted in". There was a ridiculous version of the story published in the Toledo Blade last year; I have forgotten the author. My main purpose in the story, and in the two or three stories that will follow if the publishers want them, is to write a tribute to John Muir; and if I do justice to him that is my chief concern.Since writing you I have sent a sample story of the series called The Mushing Parson to the manager of the Fleming H. Revell Co., who is a personal friend of mine. The title of this is "Cussin' Jim". It is a dialect story of the Klondike stampede. I am finishing to send by this mail what will be the first story of the book. Its title is The Trail, and the scene will be laid at Skagway and the Chilcoot Pass in '97.Now as to the name of the book: I have consulted my most literary Alaska friends and some in the East, and all are taken with the title. If slang is "language on probation" the word "mush" as universally used in the North West has surely passed the probationary stage. In fact there is no other word used up here to express the same idea. And so constantly has it been employed by writers who write of the North that the country at04794 2large fully understands it. It is the most characteristic name I can think of.I am growing very enthusiastic about this work. The joy of ... Text glacier Skagway Alaska University of the Pacific: Scholarly Commons Toledo ENVELOPE(-67.317,-67.317,-73.700,-73.700) Wharton ENVELOPE(157.817,157.817,-81.050,-81.050)
institution Open Polar
collection University of the Pacific: Scholarly Commons
op_collection_id ftunivpacificdc
language English
topic Environmentalist
naturalist
travel
conservation
national parks
John Muir
history
correspondence
letters
spellingShingle Environmentalist
naturalist
travel
conservation
national parks
John Muir
history
correspondence
letters
Young, S. Hall
Letter from S. Hall Young to John Muir, 1910 Jun 14.
topic_facet Environmentalist
naturalist
travel
conservation
national parks
John Muir
history
correspondence
letters
description Cordova, Alaska;June 14th, 1910.John Muir, Martinez, Cal.,My dear Friend,Yours of May 31st came by the last steamer and I reply by its return. I am sincerely sorry if I made a mistake in the facts of the climb. I aimed to be absolutely truthful in the story as far as my memory goes. And still, while acknowledging that you must be correct in the matter of our not crossing the glacier on the way up because--well, because you are you, I cannot make my recollection of it come other than as I told it. You should have felt at liberty to make the correction.I did not see George Wharton James's article on the subject, but I know James and his tendency to get facts mixed. He knew my purpose to publish the story, and should not have "butted in". There was a ridiculous version of the story published in the Toledo Blade last year; I have forgotten the author. My main purpose in the story, and in the two or three stories that will follow if the publishers want them, is to write a tribute to John Muir; and if I do justice to him that is my chief concern.Since writing you I have sent a sample story of the series called The Mushing Parson to the manager of the Fleming H. Revell Co., who is a personal friend of mine. The title of this is "Cussin' Jim". It is a dialect story of the Klondike stampede. I am finishing to send by this mail what will be the first story of the book. Its title is The Trail, and the scene will be laid at Skagway and the Chilcoot Pass in '97.Now as to the name of the book: I have consulted my most literary Alaska friends and some in the East, and all are taken with the title. If slang is "language on probation" the word "mush" as universally used in the North West has surely passed the probationary stage. In fact there is no other word used up here to express the same idea. And so constantly has it been employed by writers who write of the North that the country at04794 2large fully understands it. It is the most characteristic name I can think of.I am growing very enthusiastic about this work. The joy of ...
format Text
author Young, S. Hall
author_facet Young, S. Hall
author_sort Young, S. Hall
title Letter from S. Hall Young to John Muir, 1910 Jun 14.
title_short Letter from S. Hall Young to John Muir, 1910 Jun 14.
title_full Letter from S. Hall Young to John Muir, 1910 Jun 14.
title_fullStr Letter from S. Hall Young to John Muir, 1910 Jun 14.
title_full_unstemmed Letter from S. Hall Young to John Muir, 1910 Jun 14.
title_sort letter from s. hall young to john muir, 1910 jun 14.
publisher Scholarly Commons
publishDate 1910
url https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/5039
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/6055/viewcontent/muir19_0505_let.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-67.317,-67.317,-73.700,-73.700)
ENVELOPE(157.817,157.817,-81.050,-81.050)
geographic Toledo
Wharton
geographic_facet Toledo
Wharton
genre glacier
Skagway
Alaska
genre_facet glacier
Skagway
Alaska
op_source John Muir Correspondence (PDFs)
op_relation https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/5039
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/6055/viewcontent/muir19_0505_let.pdf
op_rights Some letters written to John Muir may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.
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