The Invention of Nature (67 page)

BOOK: The Invention of Nature
9.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

31 ‘old owl’ and ‘a croaker’: Marsh to Hiram Powers, 31 March 1863, ibid.

32 Caroline Marsh’s ill health: Lowenthal 2003, pp.47, 92, 378.

33 illness ‘incurable’: Marsh to Spencer Fullerton Baird, 6 July 1859, UVM.

34 Marsh carried Caroline: Marsh to Caroline Estcourt, 19 April 1851, Marsh 1888, vol.1, pp.219.

35 Nile expedition: Marsh to Lyndon Marsh, 10 February 1851; Marsh to Frederick Wislizenus, 10 February 1851; Marsh to H.A. Holmes, 25 February 1851; Marsh to Caroline Estcourt, 28 March 1851, Marsh 1888, vol.1, pp.205, 208, 211ff.

36 ‘fresh from the Desert’: Marsh to Caroline Estcourt, 28 March 1851, ibid. p.213.

37 ‘very earth’: Marsh to Caroline Estcourt, 28 March 1851, ibid., p.215.

38 ‘I should like to know’: Ibid.

39 ‘subdued by long’: Marsh to Frederick Wislizenus and Lucy Crane Frederick Wislizenus, 10 February 1851, ibid., p.206.

40 ‘restless activity’: AH Aspects 1849, vol.2, p.11; AH Views 2014, p.158; AH Ansichten 1849, vol.2, p.13.

41 ‘political and moral’: AH Plant Geography 2009, p.73.

42 ‘wherever he stepped’: AH, 10 March 1801, AH Diary 2003, vol.1, p.44; for AH on deforestation in Cuba and Mexico, see AH Cuba 2011, p.115; AH New Spain 1811, vol.3, pp.251–2.

43 ‘How I envy your’: Marsh to Spencer Fullerton Baird, 3 May 1851, Marsh 1888, vol.1, p.223.

44 ‘a student of nature’: Marsh to American Consul-General in Cairo, 2 June 1851, ibid., p.226.

45 ‘Scorpions are not yet’: Marsh to Spencer Fullerton Baird, 23 August 1850, ibid., p.172.

46 ‘and all else’: Spencer Fullerton Baird to Marsh, 9 February 1851; see also 9 August 1849 and 10 March 1851, UVM.

47 ‘Trust nothing to the’: Marsh 1856, p.160; Lowenthal 2003, pp.130–31.

48 ‘most part barren’: Marsh to Caroline and James B. Estcourt, 18 June 1851; for travels in 1851, see Marsh to Susan Perkins Marsh, 16 June 1851, Marsh 1888, vol.1, pp. 227–32, 238; Lowenthal 2003, pp.127–9.

49 ‘assiduous husbandry’: Marsh to Caroline Estcourt, 28 March 1851, Marsh 1888, vol.1, p.215; see also Marsh, ‘The Study of Nature’, Christian Examiner, 1860, Marsh 2001, p.86.

50 ‘nature in the shorn’: Marsh 1857, p.11.

51 ‘Man is everywhere’: Marsh 1864, p.36.

52 all the forests’: Ibid., p.234.

53 US agriculture and manufacture: Johnson 1999, pp.361, 531.

54 Marsh began Man and Nature: Marsh to Spencer Fullerton Baird, 10, 16 and 21 May 1860, Marsh 1888, vol.1, pp.420–22.

55 raising Chicago: Chicago Daily Tribune, 26 January 1858, 7 February 1866.

56 empty rivers and lakes: Marsh 1857, pp.12–15; Marsh 1864, pp.107–8.

57 statistics on fish and timber: Marsh 1864, pp.106, 251–7.

58 cash crops: Ibid., p.278.

59 size of fields for meat diet: Ibid., pp.277–8.

60 ‘small duties & large’: Marsh to Francis Lieber, 12 April 1860; for Marsh’s finances, Marsh 1888, vol.1, p.362; Lowenthal 2003, pp.155ff., 199.

61 ‘I wish I was 30 years’: Marsh to Francis Lieber, 3 June 1859, UVM.

62 ‘I could not survive’: Marsh to Charles D. Drake, 1 April 1861, Marsh 1888, vol.1, p.429.

63 preparations for Italy: Lowenthal 2003, p.219.

64 Marsh’s speech at Burlington: Benedict 1888, vol.1, pp.20–21.

65 Marsh departure from US: Lowenthal 2003, p.219; they arrived in Turin on 7 June 1861, see Caroline Marsh, 7 June 1861, Caroline Marsh Journal, NYPL, p.1.

66 Marsh, Garibaldi, Union forces: Lowenthal 2003, p.238ff.

67 Marsh and Riscasoli: Caroline Marsh, winter 1861, Caroline Marsh Journal, NYPL, p.71.

68 ‘I have been entirely disappointed’: Marsh to Henry and Maria Buell Hickok, 14 January 1862; Marsh to William H. Seward, 12 May 1864, Lowenthal 2003, p.252; see also Caroline Marsh, 17 September 1861, 5 January 1862, 26 December 1862, 17 January 1863, Caroline Marsh Journal, NYPL, pp.43, 94, 99, 107.

69 excursions: Caroline Marsh, 15 February, 25 March 1862, Caroline Marsh Journal, NYPL, pp.128, 148.

70 ‘ice-mad’: Marsh to Spencer Fullerton Baird, 21 November 1864, UVM.

71 ‘I am not a bad climber’: Ibid.

72 ‘We stole an hour’: Caroline Marsh, 10 March 1862; see also 11 March, 24 March and 1 April 1862, Caroline Marsh Journal, NYPL, pp.143–4, 148, 151.

73 ‘a crime’ against nature: Caroline Marsh, 7 April 1862, ibid., p.157.

74 writing Man and Nature: Caroline Marsh, 14 April 1862 and 2 April 1863, ibid., pp.154, 217; Lowenthal 2003, pp.270–73; see also Marsh to Charles Eliot Norton, 17 October 1863, UVM.

75 ‘rather knocked out’: Caroline Marsh, 1 April 1862, Caroline Marsh Journal, NYPL, p.151.

76 commit a ‘libricide’: Caroline about Marsh, Lowenthal 2003, p.272.

77 ‘I do this’: Marsh to Charles Eliot Norton, 17 October 1863, UVM.

78 ‘Man the Disturber’: Charles Scribner to Marsh, 7 July 1863; Marsh to Charles Scribner 10 September 1863, Marsh 1864, p.xxviii.

79 ‘I shall steal’: Marsh to Spencer Fullerton Baird, 21 May 1860, Marsh 1888, vol.1, p.422.

80 Marsh references to AH: Marsh 1864, pp.13–14, 68, 75, 91,128, 145, 175ff.

81 man’s interference with nature: For hats and beavers, see Marsh 1864, pp.76–7; birds and insects, pp.34, 39, 79ff.; wolves, p.76; Boston aqueduct, p.92.

82 ‘All nature is linked’: Ibid., p.96.

83 for ‘consumption’: Ibid., p.36.

84 extinction of animals and plants: Ibid., pp.64ff., 77ff., 96ff.

85 ‘arid desert’ (footnote): AH, 4 March 1800, AH Diary 2000, p.217; AH Personal Narrative 1814–29, vol.4, p.154.

86 irrigation: Marsh 1864, pp.322, 324.

87 ‘shattered surface’: Marsh 1864, Ibid., p.43.

88 Marsh on European landscape: Marsh to Spencer Fullerton Baird, 23 August 1850, July 1852, Marsh 1888, vol.1, p.174, 280; Marsh 1864, p.9, 19.

89 ‘a desolation almost’: Marsh 1864, p.42.

90 Roman Empire: Marsh, ‘Oration before the New Hampshire State Agricultural Society’, 10 October 1856, Marsh 2001, pp.36–7; Lowenthal 2003, p.x; Marsh 1864, p.xxiv.

91 ‘Let us be wise’: Marsh 1864, p.198.

92 ‘We can never know’: Ibid., pp.91–2; see also p110.

93 ‘homo sapiens Europae’: Ibid., p.46.

94 Madison and AH: AH sent his books to Madison; see David Warden to James Madison, 2 December 1811, Madison Papers PS, vol.4, p.48; Madison to AH, 30 November 1830, Terra 1959, p.799.

95 Madison’s speech: Madison, Address to the Agricultural Society of Albemarle, 12 May 1818, Madison Papers RS, vol.1, pp.260–83; Wulf 2011, p.204ff.

96 Bolívar’s decree: Bolívar, Decree, 19 December 1825, Bolívar 2009, p.258.

97 ‘Measures for the Protection’: Bolívar, Measures for the Protection and Wise Use of the National Forests, 31 July 1829, Bolívar 2003, pp.199–200.

98 AH and quinine harvest: AH Aspects 1849, vol.2, p.268; AH Views 2014, p.268; AH Ansichten 1849, vol.2, p.319; AH, 23–28 July 1802, AH Diary 2003, vol.2, pp.126–30.

99 Bolívar and tree removal (footnote): Bolívar, Decree, 31 July 1829, Bolívar 2009, p.351; O’Leary 1879–8, vol.2, p.363.

100 ‘In Wildness is the’: Thoreau, ‘Walking’, 1862 (first delivered as lecture in April 1851), Thoreau Excursion and Poems 1906, p.224.

101 ‘inalienable forever’: Thoreau, 15 October 1859, Thoreau Journal 1906, vol.12, p.387.

102 ‘national preserves’: Thoreau Maine Woods 1906, p.173.

103 ‘Humboldt was the great’: Marsh, ‘The Study of Nature’, Christian Examiner, 1860, Marsh 2001, p.82.

104 references to AH in Man and Nature: Marsh 1864, pp.13–14, 68, 75, 91, 128, 145, 175ff.

105 evils of deforestation: Ibid., pp.128, 131, 137, 145, 154, 171, 180, 186–8.

106 ‘thus the earth is’: Ibid., p.187.

107 ‘We are … breaking up’: Ibid., p.52; for damage like earthquake, p.226.

108 ‘Prompt measures’: Ibid., pp.201–2.

109 ‘inalienable property’: Ibid., p.203; for replanting forests, pp.259ff., 269–80, 325.

110 ‘We have now felled’: Ibid., p.280.

111 ‘Earth is fast’: Ibid., p.43.

112 ‘rudest kick’: Wallace Stegner, in ibid., p.xvi.

113 Marsh’s donation of copyright (footnote): Lowenthal 2003, p.302.

114 ‘epoch-making’: Gifford Pinchot, ibid., p.304; Gifford Pinchot to Mary Pinchot, 21 March 1886, Miller 2001, p.392; for John Muir, see Wolfe 1946, p.83.

115 1873 Timber Culture Act: Lowenthal 2003, p.xi.

116 ‘along the slope’: Hugh Cleghorn to Marsh, 6 Marsh 1868; for influence of Man and Nature worldwide, see Lowenthal 2003, pp.303–5.

117 ‘the fountainhead of’: Mumford 1931, p.78.

118 ‘The future … is more uncertain’: Marsh 1861, p.637.

Chapter 22: Art, Ecology and Nature

1 ‘Two souls, alas’: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 29 May 1859, p.63; see also Haeckel to parents, 29 May 1859, Haeckel 1921b, p.66; Carl Gottlob Haeckel to Ernst Haeckel, 19 May 1859 (Akademieprojekt ‘Ernst Haeckel (1834–1918): Briefedition’: I have Thomas Bach to thank for providing me with a summary of the transcript).

2 ‘beckoning temptations’: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 29 May 1859, Haeckel 1921b, p.64.

3 ‘Mephistopheles’ scornful laughter’: Ibid.

4 ‘understand nature’: Ibid.

5 AH, art and nature: Cosmos 1845–52, vol.2, pp.74, 85, 87; AH Kosmos 1845–50, vol.2, pp.76, 87, 90; Haeckel to parents, 6 November 1852, Haeckel 1921a, p.9.

6 Haeckel’s later reputation (footnote): Richards 2008, pp.244–76, 489–512.

7 AH in Haeckel’s youth: Haeckel to Wilhelm Bölsche, 4 August 1892, 4 November 1899, 14 May 1900, Haeckel Bölsche Letters 2002, pp.46, 110, 123–4; Haeckel 1924, p.ix; Richards 2009, p.20ff.; Di Gregorio 2004, pp.31–5; Krauße 1995, pp.352–3; Humboldt’s books are still on the bookshelves in Haeckel’s study in Ernst-Haeckel-Haus in Jena.

8 Haeckel read Cosmos: Haeckel to his parents, 6 November 1852, Haeckel 1921a, p.9.

9 Haeckel’s appearance: Max Fürbringer in 1866, Richards 2009, p.83; and exercising, see Haeckel to his parents, 11 June 1856, Haeckel 1921a, p.194.

10 ‘I cannot tell you’: Haeckel to his parents, 27 November 1852; see also 23 May and 8 July 1853, 5 May 1855, Haeckel 1921a, pp.19, 54, 63–4, 132.

11 ivy for AH’s portrait: Haeckel to his parents, 23 May 1853, ibid., p.54.

12 ‘most ardent desire’: Haeckel to his parents, 4 May 1853, ibid., p.49.

13 Haeckel and Müller: Haeckel 1924, p.xi; Richards 2009, p.39; Di Gregorio 2004, p.44.

14 Haeckel, Heligoland and medusae: Richards 2009, p.40; Haeckel 1924, p.xii.

15 ‘obsessed’: Haeckel to his parents, 1 June 1853, Haeckel 1921a, p.59.

16 ‘preciously sumptuous editions’: Haeckel to his parents, 17 February 1854, ibid., pp.100.

17 atlas to Cosmos: this was Heinrich Berghaus’s Physikalischer Atlas; Haeckel to his parents, 25 December 1852, ibid., p.26.

18 memorize through images: Haeckel to his parents, 25 December 1852, ibid., p.27.

19 excursion to Tegel: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 2 September 1858, Haeckel 1927, pp.62–3.

20 ‘man of reason’: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 23 May 1858, ibid., p.12.

21 ‘day and night’: Haeckel to his parents, 17 February 1854, Haeckel 1921a, pp.101.

22 ‘Robinsonian project’: Ibid., p.102.

23 ‘far, far into the’: Haeckel to his parents, 11 June 1856, ibid., p.194.

24 Haeckel’s practice in Berlin: ‘Bericht über die Feier des sechzigsten Geburtstages von Ernst Haeckel am 17. Februar 1894 in Jena’, 1894, p.15; Haeckel 1924, p.xv.

25 ‘truly German forest’: Haeckel to a friend, 14 September 1858; see also Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 26 September 1858, Haeckel 1927, pp.67, 72–3 and Haeckel 1924, p.xv.

26 ‘completely unspoiled and pure’: Haeckel to a friend, 14 September 1858, Haeckel 1927, p.67.

27 engagement announcement: 14 September 1858, Richards 2009, p.51.

28 ‘insurmountable revulsion’: Haeckel to his parents, 1 November 1852, Haeckel 1921a, p.6.

29 Haeckel about Naples: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 9 April, 24 April, 6 June 1859, Haeckel 1921b, pp.30–31, 37ff., 67.

30 two souls in his chest: Ernst Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 29 May 1859, ibid., p.63ff.

31 Haeckel and Allmers on Ischia: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 25 June and 1 August 1859, ibid., pp.69, 79–80.

32 ‘interconnected whole’: Haeckel to friends, August 1859, Uschmann 1983, p.46.

33 ‘microscoping worm’: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 7 August 1859, Haeckel 1921b, p.86.

34 ‘Outside! Outside!’: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 16 August 1859, ibid., p.86.

35 ‘ossified scholar’: Ibid.

36 ‘half wild life’: Ibid.

37 ‘delightful glory’: Ibid.

38 ‘faithful paintbrush’: Ibid.

39 ‘Humboldt’s favourite interests’: Haeckel to his parents, 21 October 1859, ibid., pp.117–18.

40 ‘can’t have you travelling’: Carl Gottlob Haeckel to Ernst Haeckel, late 1859, di Gregori 2004, p.58; see also Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 26 November 1859, Haeckel 1921b, p.134.

41 ‘tame’ professor: Haeckel to his parents, 21 October 1859, Haeckel 1921b, p.118.

42 ‘delicate works of art’: Haeckel to his parents, 29 October 1859, ibid., pp.122–3.

43 ‘most exquisite brilliance’: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 29 February 1860, ibid., p.160.

44 daily life Messina: Haeckel to his parents, 29 October 1859; Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 16 December 1859, ibid., pp.124, 138.

45 thanks sea gods: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 16 February 1860, ibid., p.155

46 ‘made for me’: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 29 February 1860, ibid., p.160.

47 ‘poetic and delightful’: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 29 February 1860, ibid.

48 one hundred new species: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 10 and 24 March 1860, ibid., pp.165–6.

49 microscope and drawing simultaneously: Haeckel to his parents, 21 December 1852, Haeckel 1921a, p.26.

50 ‘penetrated deeper into’: Haeckel 1899–1904, preface.

51 ‘create a new “style”!!’: Haeckel to Allmers, 14 May 1860, Koop 1941, p.45.

52 ‘crochet pattern’ (footnote): Allmers to Haeckel, 7 January 1862, ibid., p.79.

53 associate professor: Haeckel was made Professor extraordinarius in 1862 – comparable to an associate professor – and then Professor ordinarius in 1865, a full professorship; Richards 2009, pp.91, 115–16.

54 ‘life-giving sunlight’: Haeckel to Anna Sethe, 15 June 1860, Haeckel 1927, p.100.

BOOK: The Invention of Nature
9.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Children by Howard Fast
By My Side by Alice Peterson
nancy werlocks diary s02e15 by dawson, julie ann
The Heist by Will McIntosh
It's a Waverly Life by Maria Murnane
Censored 2012 by Mickey Huff
Through The Wall by Wentworth, Patricia
The Wandering Arm by Sharan Newman
The Fireside Inn by Lily Everett


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024