the john muir exhibit - press_releases - thoreau and muir among the indians
Henry Thoreau and John Muir Among the Indians
by Richard F. Fleck
(
from the book's dust jacket
)
Henry Thoreau and John Muir Among the Indians
by Richard F. Fleck
1985
Archon Books.
Hamden, Connecticut
No two persons in the United States have written
with as much passion and power about the bond between
human beings and the natural world as Thoreau of Walden
and Muir of Mountains of California. For both, Native
Americans best exemplified the innate need of the human
spirit to merge with the primal wilderness. This is the
first book to treat together and in depth these two great
students of our natural America.
Muir read Thoreau carefully, as his annotated copies
of Thoreau's works show. The latter had spent much
time with the Penobscot Indians, whose way of life was
even then being constantly disrupted by commercial
interests. Later he wrote
Walden
and
The Maine Woods
.
Muir lived among the Indians of California, particularly
the Digger, Thlinkit, and Eskimoan people and talked
extensively about them in
Our National Parks
,
The Cruise of the Corwin,
Travels in Alaska,
and
The Mountains of California
.
Native Americans not only confirmed Muir's
belief in the need for a harmonious relationship with
nature, but also inspired him to a greater awareness of
the intricacies of this relationship.
Previously unpublished selections from Thoreau's
"Indian Notebooks" and from Muir's notes on
Indians of the western United States bring alive their fascinations.
In a larger sense, this book shows the Indian influence on
the development not only of their -- but America's --
natural philosophies and environmental awareness.
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