Creator

John Muir

Recipient

[Jeanne C. ] Carr

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Transcription

[2]As soon as I hear of your finding a home I shall begin a plan of visiting you – I have frequently seen favorable reports upon the silk culture in Cola. The climate of Los Angeles is said to be as well tempered for the peculiar requirements of the business as any in the world. I think that you have brought your boys to the right field for planting. I doubt if in all the world mans comforts & necessities can be more easily & abund- antly supplied than in Cola. I have often wished the doctor near me in my rambles among the rocks Pure science is a most unmarketable com- modity in California – Conspicuous energetic unmixed materialism rules supreme in all classes, Prof Whitney as you are aware was ac used of heresy while conducting the state survey because in his reports he devoted some space to fossils & other equally dead & unCalifornian objects instead of columns of discovered & measured mines. I am engaged at present in the very important & patriarchal business of sheep – I am a gentle shepherd. The gray box in which I reside is distant about seven miles northeast from Hofuton, two miles north of Snellings. The Merced pours past me on the south from the Yo Semite. Smooth domey hills & the tree fringe of the Tuolermine bound me on the north – the Lordly Sierras join sky & plain on the east & the far coast mountains on the west[3]My mutton family of eighteen hundred range over about ten sq’ miles & I have abundant oportunities for reading & botanizying, I shall be here for about two weeks. When I shall be engaged in shearing sheep between the Tuolumne & Stanisl[illegible] from the Joaquin to the Sierra foothills for about two months. I will be in Cola until next November when I mean to start for South America ------------------------------------------ I received your Castletion letter & wrote you in November. I suppose you left Vermont before my letter had time to reach you – You must prepare for your Yo Semite baptism in June. Here is a sweet little flower that I have just found among the rocks of the brook that waters Twenty-hill-hollow. Its anthers are curiously united in pairs & form stars upon its breast. The Calyx seems to have been judged to plain & green to accompany the splendid Corolla, & so is left behind among the Leaves I first met this plant among the Sierra Nevadas. there are five or six species; for beauty & simplicity they might be allowed to dwell within sight of Calypso There are about twenty plants in flower in the gardens of my daily walks. The first was born in January I give them more attention than I give the dirty mongrel creatures of my flock that are about half made by God, & half by man

Location

Near Snellings, Merced Co.[Calif.]

Date Original

[1869] Feb 24

Source

Original letter dimensions: 21.5 x 33.5 cm.

Resource Identifier

muir02_0029-let.tif

File Identifier

Reel 02, Image 0029

Copyright Statement

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

Owning Institution

University of the Pacific Library Holt-Atherton Special Collections. Please contact this institution directly to obtain copies of the images or permission to publish or use them beyond educational purposes.

Copyright Holder

Muir-Hanna Trust

Copyright Date

1984

Page Number

Page 2

Keywords

John Muir, correspondence, letters, author, writing, naturalist, California, correspondent, mail, message, post, exchange of letters, missive, notes, epistle

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