Wild Northern Scenes, Or, Sporting Adventures with the Rifle and the Rod
Author | : Samuel H. Hammond |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 368 |
Release | : 1857 |
ISBN-10 | : NYPL:33433082507751 |
ISBN-13 | : |
Rating | : 4/5 ( Downloads) |
Download or read book Wild Northern Scenes, Or, Sporting Adventures with the Rifle and the Rod written by Samuel H. Hammond and published by . This book was released on 1857 with total page 368 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This work by an Albany attorney and avid sportsman is one of the first significant American statements of the value of wilderness. Celebrating the Adirondack region as a resource for human health, rejuvenation, and recreation, it offers a series of reminiscences demonstrating the pleasures of sport, comradeship, conversation, and natural beauty in a place "which civilization with its improvements and its rush of progress has not yet invaded" (p. vii). In a fast-changing world, Hammond sees the wilderness as a living survival of America's ancient past, "inhabited by the same wild things, save the red man, that were there thousands of years ago" (vii). He proposes that a portion of the region--"a circle of a hundred miles in diameter" (p. 83)--be set aside as a permanent wilderness protected by law from human alteration, "a place wherein a man could turn savage and rest, for a fortnight or a month, from the toils and cares of life" (p. 84). Yet Hammond also celebrates the advance of "Christianity and civilization... [taking] the place of the ancient forests" (pp. 206-207) throughout the land. This apparent paradox points to what is perhaps the book's most basic theme: nineteenth-century Americans' simultaneous fascination and disquiet with, commitment to and reservations about, the pace and scale of change and "progress" in contemporary American life. This theme provides the explanatory context for Hammond's celebration of wilderness and his revolutionary proposal to protect it. Wilderness is important not in its own right, as biological community, but because of its value to man: strictly circumscribed in space, a place of merely temporary recourse for human beings, it can function as a supportive resource for civilization: "Give a month to the enjoyment of a wilderness life, and you will return to your labors invigorated in strength, buoyant in spirit--a wiser, healthier, and a better man" (p. 341). Hammond's apparent paradox is in fact no paradox at all: contact with wilderness is, in effect, a kind of lubricant to soothe the frictions of the modern world, re-engaging contemporary man in the workings of that world more effectively and smoothly; and wilderness itself is no longer civilization's potent opponent but its servant, its domesticated complement. An early instance of the prominent role sportsmen played in the conservation movement, illuminating the popular sensibility from which the movement for permanent protection of wilderness sprang, this work suggests that the motivations for that movement were complex indeed.