Creator

John Muir

Creator

John Muir

Recipient

Louie [Strentzel]

Transcription

[Page 5]

At John Swett's,
Wednesday night,
Feb.,1880.

Dear Louie,

I'm still drifting, and unsettled, and lonesome, in this big trodden wilderness of tameness.I had made up my mind to shut myself up and bend my mind to work until I felt better, but I have been pulled about and done nothing save a dozen letters or so of the common correspondence kind.Had a good warm hearty time with Sam, though toned down a little on my part by the presence of ex-mayor Alvord, who wanted to meet me.They enquired very kindly about you all, and Mrs. Williams showed me a lot of colored vine leaves carefully pressed which she said had belonged to a box of beautiful grapes you had sent. Next day Alvord drove me to the park and showed me through the grounds and greenhouses.They are doing a very good work out there in the sand. Mr. Alvord then introduced me to the Pacific Club, and gave me a paper conferring the privilege of reading, loafing, smoking, in the rooms for one month from date!
Then I called into the realty office, alias Real Estate office of Magee, when, for the moment neglecting business, he enquired very pointedly where I had so suddenly vanished to that day.Had I been examining cherry buds about the Martinez hills, etc.? I answered by telling him to give ear to the most astounding statement ever uttered on this coast since the Glacial Period, and all about himself.He then loosened his grip on me, and listened with his lips wide ajar while I told him that a lady of remarkable discrimination up there in that cherry region gave it as her opinion that he was handsome! "Then go for that woman, she is the first really sensible woman judge of masculine beauty I have ever heard of in my life. Many and long and weary are the years that I have been seeking that recognition of beauty from the sex that to me of right belongs.Now I have found it and may die in peace."
After escaping from this whirlwind of dusty chaff that was far from pleasing to me, I went to seek Mrs. Black, who used to be kind to me in my early beginning days in Yosemite Valley, having learned that she was about to leave the city for her home in the mountains about Coulterville. [I] dined with her and the friends with whom she was stopping.Then they begged me to go with them to hear Clara Morris dying at the Baldwin Theatre, and I went. Her acting was very good, but the play, "Alixe", or "Dixie", has very little or no good healthy sentiment in it, and I was as glad to get out of it as out of the foul, vulgar, steaming atmosphere, loaded almost to the dead-point with carbonic acid.
Next day dined with Roman and Upham at the Bohemian Club rooms. Roman and Somers begged me to write something for the "Californian", promising to pay, and urging the righteousness of writing for and encouraging a home journal, etc.Then I chanced to meet Pixley on the street, and he too wanted writing for the Argonaut,ten letters long or short at ten dollars each, or as much more as I thought fair.This from him was complimentary, but I urged engagements with [the] Bulletin.However, I promised a bunch of facts on lack of government in Alaska, which he said he would put together and fill out with his own reflections, etc.
Yesterday fell into the hands and tender mercies of the tailors, escaped unscathed.In the evening came up here, John declaring he must have a week's visit.Tomorrow evening I have to dine with the Payots. Next day, or Saturday, perhaps, I am to set off with that handsome Magee on an excursion to Tahoe, according to some old promise I had made him. The Sacramento people want a le[cture] (the Literary Society).At least 20 s[ ] Mr. Minus, who delivered one there last week.Probably I shall make that long-delayed Chico visit while I am up that way.A' that and a' that, and alack ! What is a body to do? John, too, wants me to go with him to the hills above San Jose to look at land he thinks of buying, near Norton's, and what will be left of the wee winter monthies for work on the other side of all this.
The day I left you seemed intensely light and beautiful, and notwithstanding my dazed, half-awake condition I noticed some telling glacial phenomena as the train glided along the curves of the bay that I had not seen before.Mt. Diablo stood out from one point in clear relief, and the ice-sculpture on the north from the action of small residual

[Page 6]

[Letter of John Muir, to Mrs. Muir, Feb., 1880, continued]

glaciers that had lingered in the shadows was plainly manifest.The erosion, too, of the straits across the edges of the upturned edges of the stratified rocks was very apparent, and pleased me very much.It is one of the advantages of travel that one sees better any particular locality and all it contains within reach, for all the different portions of our beautiful world shed ligit on one another just as do the different chapters of a fine harmonious poem.
This sunny reviving weather is feeding the unborn leaves and blossoms, and how grand a evelopment there will be in a few days.Your mother, too, will be well. The Swetts and Uphams enquired anxiously about her. Write as soon as you get this. No, I fear it would not reach me in time. The smaest of the wee sma hours is at hand.

Goodnight.Heaven bless you all.

Ever truly yours,

J. M.

Location

At John Swett's [San Francisco, Calif]

Circa Date

1880 Feb [ ]

Source

Original letter dimensions: 20.5 x 25.5 cm.

Resource Identifier

muir04_0046-md-1.pdf

File Identifier

Reel 04, Image 0045

Collection Identifier

Online finding aid for the microform version of the John Muir Correspondence http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0w1031nc

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, click here to view the Holt-Atherton Special Collections policies.

Owning Institution

Holt-Atherton Special Collections, University of the Pacific Library. 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

Pages

6 pages

Keywords

Environmentalist, naturalist, travel, conservation, national parks, John Muir, Yosemite, California, history, correspondence, letters

Share

COinS
 
 
 

To view the content in your browser, please download Adobe Reader or, alternately,
you may Download the file to your hard drive.

NOTE: The latest versions of Adobe Reader do not support viewing PDF files within Firefox on Mac OS and if you are using a modern (Intel) Mac, there is no official plugin for viewing PDF files within the browser window.