Audiolibro: Desert, Further Studies in Natural Appearances
- Download 00 - Dedication-Preface audio
- Download 01 - The Approach audio
- Download 02 - The Make of the Desert audio
- Download 03 - The Bottom of the Bowl audio
- Download 04 - The Silent River audio
- Download 05 - Light, Air, and Color audio
- Download 06 - Desert Sky and Clouds audio
- Download 07 - Illusions audio
- Download 08 - Cactus and Greasewood audio
- Download 09 - Desert Animals audio
- Download 10 - Winged Life audio
- Download 11 - Mesas and Foot-Hills audio
- Download 12 - Mountain - Barriers audio
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Descripción
The Desert by John Charles Van Dyke, published in 1901, is a lush, poetic description of the natural beauty of the American Southwest. "What land can equal the desert with its wide plains, its grim mountains, and its expanding canopy of sky!" Van Dyke, a cultivated art historian, saw "sublimity" in the desert's "lonely desolation," which previous generations had perceived only as a wasteland, and his book has a conservationist flavor which seems distinctly modern. "The deserts should never be reclaimed," he writes. "They are the breathing spaces of the west and should be preserved for ever." The changing colors of the sky, hills, and sand impress Van Dyke, as do the mirages. He celebrates the "long overlooked commonplace things of nature"-- cactus and grease wood, desert animals, and "winged life," the birds and insects. His writing has a philosophical undertone. "Not in vain these wastes of sand ... simply because they are beautiful in themselves and good to look upon whether they be life or death." Anyone who views with equal awe fiery sunrises and weeds growing out of pavement cracks will enjoy this reading of Van Dyke's The Desert.(Summary by Sue Anderson)
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