Speaking for Nature: How Literary Naturalists from Henry Thoreau to Rachel Carson Have Shaped America |
Contents
Burroughs and Muir I | 1 |
The Yosemite Story | 33 |
THE GENTLE ART OF SEEING | 59 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Speaking for Nature: How Literary Naturalists from Henry Thoreau to Rachel ... Paul Brooks No preview available - 1983 |
Common terms and phrases
Aldo Leopold animals Atlantic Audubon Society beauty became Beebe Boone and Crockett Brewster California career century Chapman charm Clarence King Club Concord conservation creatures death delight desert early earth editor Emerson Ernest Thompson Seton famous field Flagg Forest Frank Chapman George Bird Grinnell George Perkins Marsh Grand Canyon Grinnell Harvard Henry Fairfield Osborn Henry Thoreau Higginson Hornaday hunting John Burroughs John Muir journal knew Krutch land landscape Lanier later Leopold literary living Louis Agassiz magazine Marsh mountains Muir's National Park natural history naturalist nature essay nature writers never Olmsted Osborn outdoor popular Powell published Rachel Carson readers recalled River scene scenery scientific sense Sierra Silent Spring song story Theodore Roosevelt thrush tion trees trip ture West White wild wilderness wildlife William Wilson Flagg woods words writing wrote York Yosemite Valley young