"Nature-study not only educates, but it educates nature-ward;
and nature is ever our companion, whether we will or no. Even
though we are determined to shut ourselves in an office, nature
sends her messengers. The light, the dark, the moon, the cloud, the
rain, the wind, the falling leaf, the fly, the bouquet, the bird,
the cockroach-they are all ours. If one is to be happy, he must be
in sympathy with common things. He must live in harmony with his
environment. One cannot be happy yonder nor tomorrow: he is happy
here and now, or never. Our stock of knowledge of common things
should be great. Few of us can travel. We must know the things at
home." from "The Meaning of the Nature-study Movement"
"To feel that one is a useful and cooperating part in nature is
to give one kinship, and to open the mind to the great resources
and the high enthusiasms. Here arise the fundamental common
relations. Here arise also the great emotions and conceptions of
sublimity and grandeur, of majesty and awe, the uplift of vast
desires when one contemplates the earth and the universe and
desires to take them into the soul and to express oneself in their
terms; and here also the responsible practices of life take root."
from "The Holy Earth"
Before Wendell Berry and Aldo Leopold, there was the
horticulturalist and botanist Liberty Hyde Bailey (1858 1954). For
Wendell Berry, Bailey was a revelation, a symbol of the
nature-minded agrarianism Berry himself popularized. For Aldo
Leopold, Bailey offered a model of the scholar-essayist-naturalist.
In his revolutionary work of eco-theology, The Holy Earth, Bailey
challenged the anthropomorphism the people-centeredness of a
vulnerable world.
A trained scientist writing in the lyrical tradition of Emerson,
Burroughs, and Muir, Bailey offered the twentieth century its first
exquisitely interdisciplinary biocentric worldview; this Michigan
farmer's son defined the intellectual and spiritual foundations of
what would become the environmental movement. For nearly a half
century, Bailey dominated matters agricultural, environmental, and
scientific in the United States. He worked both to improve the
lives of rural folk and to preserve the land from which they earned
their livelihood. Along the way, he popularized nature study in
U.S. classrooms, lobbied successfully for women's rights on and off
the farm, and bulwarked Teddy Roosevelt's pioneering
conservationism.
Here for the first time is an anthology of Bailey's most
important writings suitable for the general and scholarly reader
alike. Carefully selected and annotated by Zachary Michael Jack,
this book offers a comprehensive introduction to Bailey's
celebrated and revolutionary thinking on the urgent environmental,
agrarian, educational, and ecospiritual dilemmas of his day and our
own. Culled from ten of Bailey's most influential works, these
lyrical selections highlight Bailey's contributions to the
nature-study and the Country Life movements.
Published on the one-hundredth anniversary of Bailey's
groundbreaking report on behalf of the Country Life Commission,
Liberty Hyde Bailey: Essential Agrarian and Environmental Writings
will inspire a new generation of nature writers, environmentalists,
and those who share with Bailey a profound understanding of the
elegance and power of the natural world and humanity's place within
it."
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