Nature for Its Own Sake First Studies in Natural Appearances

Cover Nature for Its Own Sake First Studies in Natural Appearances
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The Hudson, the Sus- quehanna, the Connecticut, and many other American rivers are still comparatively pure.
And there are fouled rivers in other countries.
I have vivid memories of different summers spent beside the Thames, the Seine, the Rhine, the Danube, and the Arno. The Danube and the Ehine are always referred to as " blue " by the poets and the guide- RUNNING WATERS 165 book makers, but I never saw either of them that hue. They are usually a drab color, and sometimes after rain, yellowis
...h or brown- ish. In local hue they are not attractive to look upon, but muddy water does not make a bad reflector of the sky. Indeed, the Rhine and the Seine are often beautiful in their re- flections and show us many odd, amalgamated colors. For clouded water will not reflect the same hues as clear water. Even the brown- hued water in the wood-lakes of America will darken the green of the overhanging leaves in reflection, and make the white flower of the dogwood appear of a grayish tone ; and a muddy, yellow-hued river like the Tiber will sometimes cast pinkish reflections and occasionally toss up little crests that appear cream-white.

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