The Holy Earth'The Holy Earth' is a treatise on agriculture and environmentalism, written by Liberty Hyde Bailey. In this book, Bailey conceptualized a grander design of a new rural social structure that could inspire and motivate, which he proposed as a Society of the Holy Earth. He envisioned that farmers and others could rise to the task of stewardship of the land, forests, oceans and all creation. This book has been recognized as an early text of ecological theology. |
Contents
The earth is holy | |
The Holy Earth | |
The brotherhood relation | |
The underlying training of a people | |
A new | |
The honest days work | |
The daily fare | |
Buy now and read | |
The admiration of good materials | |
The keeping of the beautiful earth | |
The separate soul | |
The background spaces The forest | |
The background spaces The open fields | |
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Common terms and phrases
active enterprises agriculture Alaskan Panhandle animals apples apply aristocracy attitude background beasts begin better bio-centric bountiful Carlsruhe cities co-operation color conquest cookery course creation creatures democracy desire dominion economic efficiency enterprises essential express fact farmer farming feeling fertility fertilizer materials field forest Francis Cook fruits fundamental group action grow habit holy earth Hood River human important interest kind labor land lines of beauty live materials means Meusebach moral nations natural resources naturist necessity obligation occupation one's organization ourselves ownership partake persons philosophy planet potato privilege problem race recognize reformatory regulate relation responsibility righteous roads rural satisfaction scythe secure selfish situation social society soil spirit struggle for existence sufficient surface Table of Contents tenant things Thomas Tusser trees Tusser vast Victor Hirtzler waste