Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?], Image 5

4 us & display their pretty housekeeping, etc. All these & a thousand other unwriteable attractions enrich our walks [beyond the attainment of] on our ways to the main object of our studies & make our [paths] tracks inconceivably crooked & charming. It is as if nature were saying “Th...

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Main Author: Muir, John
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Scholarly Commons 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmn-a2/5
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmn-a2/article/1004/type/native/viewcontent
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spelling ftunivpacificmsl:oai:scholarlycommons.pacific.edu:jmn-a2-1004 2023-05-15T16:20:46+02:00 Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?], Image 5 Muir, John 2019-01-10T03:35:58Z image/jpeg https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmn-a2/5 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmn-a2/article/1004/type/native/viewcontent eng eng Scholarly Commons https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmn-a2/5 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmn-a2/article/1004/type/native/viewcontent To view additional information on copyright and related rights of this item, such as to purchase copies of images and/or obtain permission to publish them, click here to view the Holt-Atherton Special Collections policies . Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?] text 2019 ftunivpacificmsl 2022-04-10T21:48:12Z 4 us & display their pretty housekeeping, etc. All these & a thousand other unwriteable attractions enrich our walks [beyond the attainment of] on our ways to the main object of our studies & make our [paths] tracks inconceivably crooked & charming. It is as if nature were saying “The way is long & rough & the poor fellow is weary [& lonesome]. Birds sing him a song. Squirrels show him your pretty ways. Flowers beguile the steep ascent [with your beauty] Sparkle & bloom & shine ye lakes & streams & wave & [chant] & shimmer in the sunlight all ye pines & firs, that the wanderer faint not by the way. And thus we find in the fields of Nature no place that is blank or barren. Every spot on land or sea is covered with harvests & these harvests are always ripe & ready to be gathered & no toiler is ever under paid. Not in these fields. God’s wilds. Will you ever hear the sad moan of disappointment of the wise man with so many women to mind “All is vanity”. No! we are overpaid a thousand times for all our toil [&] A single day in [so divine an atmosphere of beauty & love] any of God’s wildernesses would be well worth living for & at its close should death come, without any hope of another life we would still say as we passed on “Thank You God for the glorious gift” [& pass on]. Indeed some of the 5 days I have spent along in the depths of the wilderness have shown me that immortal life beyond the grave is not essential to perfect happiness right here for these diverse days were so complete they set one free from all [was no] sense of time [in them they] had no definite beginning or ending & formed a kind of terrestrial immortality. [After] With grateful hearts for days like these we are ready for any fate. Pain grief death or oblivion [with grateful heart for the glorious gift] as long as [hearts] life [shall] endures. In the meantime our indebtedness [is] growing ever more greater. The sun continues to shine[s] & the stars & [new] beauty meets us at every step [in all our wanderings] In this Alaska excursion my eye was fixed on the glaciers of Glacier Bay. I had visited them in a canoe twice before this in the years 1879 & 80. Before they were known to the world or the bay into which they discharge was on the charts. But up to the time of this last visit I had seen but little of their sources & I was eager to make my way back into the mountains where their [countless] tributaries take their rise to see what I might learn. I wished also to measure the speed of the flow of the largest of them [one, the Muir], & count the icebergs discharged in a [given] time & to study the fossil forests – many interesting vestiges of which are displayed https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmn-a2/1004/thumbnail.jpg Text glacier glaciers Alaska University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law: Scholarly Commons Glacier Bay Moan ENVELOPE(9.843,9.843,62.881,62.881)
institution Open Polar
collection University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law: Scholarly Commons
op_collection_id ftunivpacificmsl
language English
description 4 us & display their pretty housekeeping, etc. All these & a thousand other unwriteable attractions enrich our walks [beyond the attainment of] on our ways to the main object of our studies & make our [paths] tracks inconceivably crooked & charming. It is as if nature were saying “The way is long & rough & the poor fellow is weary [& lonesome]. Birds sing him a song. Squirrels show him your pretty ways. Flowers beguile the steep ascent [with your beauty] Sparkle & bloom & shine ye lakes & streams & wave & [chant] & shimmer in the sunlight all ye pines & firs, that the wanderer faint not by the way. And thus we find in the fields of Nature no place that is blank or barren. Every spot on land or sea is covered with harvests & these harvests are always ripe & ready to be gathered & no toiler is ever under paid. Not in these fields. God’s wilds. Will you ever hear the sad moan of disappointment of the wise man with so many women to mind “All is vanity”. No! we are overpaid a thousand times for all our toil [&] A single day in [so divine an atmosphere of beauty & love] any of God’s wildernesses would be well worth living for & at its close should death come, without any hope of another life we would still say as we passed on “Thank You God for the glorious gift” [& pass on]. Indeed some of the 5 days I have spent along in the depths of the wilderness have shown me that immortal life beyond the grave is not essential to perfect happiness right here for these diverse days were so complete they set one free from all [was no] sense of time [in them they] had no definite beginning or ending & formed a kind of terrestrial immortality. [After] With grateful hearts for days like these we are ready for any fate. Pain grief death or oblivion [with grateful heart for the glorious gift] as long as [hearts] life [shall] endures. In the meantime our indebtedness [is] growing ever more greater. The sun continues to shine[s] & the stars & [new] beauty meets us at every step [in all our wanderings] In this Alaska excursion my eye was fixed on the glaciers of Glacier Bay. I had visited them in a canoe twice before this in the years 1879 & 80. Before they were known to the world or the bay into which they discharge was on the charts. But up to the time of this last visit I had seen but little of their sources & I was eager to make my way back into the mountains where their [countless] tributaries take their rise to see what I might learn. I wished also to measure the speed of the flow of the largest of them [one, the Muir], & count the icebergs discharged in a [given] time & to study the fossil forests – many interesting vestiges of which are displayed https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmn-a2/1004/thumbnail.jpg
format Text
author Muir, John
spellingShingle Muir, John
Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?], Image 5
author_facet Muir, John
author_sort Muir, John
title Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?], Image 5
title_short Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?], Image 5
title_full Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?], Image 5
title_fullStr Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?], Image 5
title_full_unstemmed Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?], Image 5
title_sort alaska notes summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?], image 5
publisher Scholarly Commons
publishDate 2019
url https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmn-a2/5
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmn-a2/article/1004/type/native/viewcontent
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.843,9.843,62.881,62.881)
geographic Glacier Bay
Moan
geographic_facet Glacier Bay
Moan
genre glacier
glaciers
Alaska
genre_facet glacier
glaciers
Alaska
op_source Alaska Notes Summer of 1890, 1890 [1895; 1912?]
op_relation https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmn-a2/5
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/jmn-a2/article/1004/type/native/viewcontent
op_rights To view additional information on copyright and related rights of this item, such as to purchase copies of images and/or obtain permission to publish them, click here to view the Holt-Atherton Special Collections policies .
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