Letter from John Muir to [William] Kent, 1908 Feb 6.

[The following is the first rough draft of a letter to Mr. Kent]Dear Mr. Kent,[It] was a surprise of the pleasantest kind seeing my name in the tender and deed of the Tamalpais Sequoias, copy of which you sent with your letter of January 17. This is the very best monument to a tree-lover's memo...

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Main Author: Muir, John
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Scholarly Commons 1908
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/5362
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmcl/article/30295/type/native/viewcontent/fullsize.jpg
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spelling ftunivpacificmsl:oai:scholarlycommons.pacific.edu:jmcl-30295 2023-06-11T04:10:01+02:00 Letter from John Muir to [William] Kent, 1908 Feb 6. Muir, John 1908-02-06T08:00:00Z image/jpeg https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/5362 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmcl/article/30295/type/native/viewcontent/fullsize.jpg eng eng Scholarly Commons https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/5362 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmcl/article/30295/type/native/viewcontent/fullsize.jpg The unpublished works of John Muir are copyrighted by the Muir-Hanna Trust. To purchase copies of images and/or obtain permission to publish or exhibit them, see http://www.pacific.edu/Library/Find/Holt-Atherton-Special-Collections/Fees-and-Forms-.html John Muir Correspondence John Muir correspondence letters author writing naturalist California correspondent mail message post exchange of letters missive notes epistle text 1908 ftunivpacificmsl 2023-05-06T22:46:48Z [The following is the first rough draft of a letter to Mr. Kent]Dear Mr. Kent,[It] was a surprise of the pleasantest kind seeing my name in the tender and deed of the Tamalpais Sequoias, copy of which you sent with your letter of January 17. This is the very best monument to a tree-lover's memory that could possibly be found in all the forests of the world. You have done me a great enduring honor and needless to say I am proud of it. Long ago Asa Gray named several plants for me, the best of which, the most interesting, is a sturdy frost-enduring daisy that I discovered on the shore of the Arctic Ocean near Icy Cape. Schools here and there have planted Muir trees in their playgrounds; a Sierra peak and also one of the Alaska glaciers bear my name, but these aboriginal woods saved from man will outlast them all, even the mountain and glacier. Compared with Sequoia glaciers are young and fleeting. Mountains great and small, thousands of them, have been ground down, weathered, washed away, and cast into the sea since the first Sequoia forests lifted their domes and spires to the sky, and two of the many species have come safely through all the geological storms that have fallen upon them since the cretaceous period, surviving even the crushing, destroying ice sheets of the glacial period.Saving these woods from the axe and saw, from money-changers and water-changers, and giving them to our country and the world is in many ways the most notable service to God and man I have ever known of since my forest wanderings began -- a much needed lesson and blessing to saint and sinner alike, and credit and encouragement to God himself. That so fine [and] divine a thing should have come out of money-mad Chicago, wha wad a thocht it.Immortal Sequoia life to you,Ever Yours,J. M.Of course I'm with you in your all-embracing Mt. Tamalpais park plan. I have been away in the Mohave desert with my daughter Helen, who is convalescing from pneumonia. Hence [the] delay in replying to your letter of Jan. 17.10059 ... Text Arctic Arctic Ocean glacier glaciers Alaska University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law: Scholarly Commons Arctic Arctic Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law: Scholarly Commons
op_collection_id ftunivpacificmsl
language English
topic John Muir
correspondence
letters
author
writing
naturalist
California
correspondent
mail
message
post
exchange of letters
missive
notes
epistle
spellingShingle John Muir
correspondence
letters
author
writing
naturalist
California
correspondent
mail
message
post
exchange of letters
missive
notes
epistle
Muir, John
Letter from John Muir to [William] Kent, 1908 Feb 6.
topic_facet John Muir
correspondence
letters
author
writing
naturalist
California
correspondent
mail
message
post
exchange of letters
missive
notes
epistle
description [The following is the first rough draft of a letter to Mr. Kent]Dear Mr. Kent,[It] was a surprise of the pleasantest kind seeing my name in the tender and deed of the Tamalpais Sequoias, copy of which you sent with your letter of January 17. This is the very best monument to a tree-lover's memory that could possibly be found in all the forests of the world. You have done me a great enduring honor and needless to say I am proud of it. Long ago Asa Gray named several plants for me, the best of which, the most interesting, is a sturdy frost-enduring daisy that I discovered on the shore of the Arctic Ocean near Icy Cape. Schools here and there have planted Muir trees in their playgrounds; a Sierra peak and also one of the Alaska glaciers bear my name, but these aboriginal woods saved from man will outlast them all, even the mountain and glacier. Compared with Sequoia glaciers are young and fleeting. Mountains great and small, thousands of them, have been ground down, weathered, washed away, and cast into the sea since the first Sequoia forests lifted their domes and spires to the sky, and two of the many species have come safely through all the geological storms that have fallen upon them since the cretaceous period, surviving even the crushing, destroying ice sheets of the glacial period.Saving these woods from the axe and saw, from money-changers and water-changers, and giving them to our country and the world is in many ways the most notable service to God and man I have ever known of since my forest wanderings began -- a much needed lesson and blessing to saint and sinner alike, and credit and encouragement to God himself. That so fine [and] divine a thing should have come out of money-mad Chicago, wha wad a thocht it.Immortal Sequoia life to you,Ever Yours,J. M.Of course I'm with you in your all-embracing Mt. Tamalpais park plan. I have been away in the Mohave desert with my daughter Helen, who is convalescing from pneumonia. Hence [the] delay in replying to your letter of Jan. 17.10059 ...
format Text
author Muir, John
author_facet Muir, John
author_sort Muir, John
title Letter from John Muir to [William] Kent, 1908 Feb 6.
title_short Letter from John Muir to [William] Kent, 1908 Feb 6.
title_full Letter from John Muir to [William] Kent, 1908 Feb 6.
title_fullStr Letter from John Muir to [William] Kent, 1908 Feb 6.
title_full_unstemmed Letter from John Muir to [William] Kent, 1908 Feb 6.
title_sort letter from john muir to [william] kent, 1908 feb 6.
publisher Scholarly Commons
publishDate 1908
url https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/5362
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmcl/article/30295/type/native/viewcontent/fullsize.jpg
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
glacier
glaciers
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
glacier
glaciers
Alaska
op_source John Muir Correspondence
op_relation https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/5362
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmcl/article/30295/type/native/viewcontent/fullsize.jpg
op_rights The unpublished works of John Muir are copyrighted by the Muir-Hanna Trust. To purchase copies of images and/or obtain permission to publish or exhibit them, see http://www.pacific.edu/Library/Find/Holt-Atherton-Special-Collections/Fees-and-Forms-.html
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