In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

89 The Keeping of the Beautiful Earth The proper caretaking of the earth lies not alone in maintaining its fertility or in safeguarding its products.4 The lines of beauty that appeal to the eye and the charm that satisfies the five senses are in our keeping. The natural landscape is always interesting and it is satisfying. The physical universe is the source of art. We know no other form and color than that which we see in nature or derive from it. If art is true to its theme, it is one expression of morals. If it is a moral obligation to express the art sense in painting and sculpture and literature and music, so is it an equal obligation to express it in good landscape. Of the first importance is it that the race keep its artistic backgrounds, and not alone for the few who may travel far and near and who may pause deliberately, but also for those more numerous folk who must remain with the daily toil and catch the far look only as they labor. To put the best expression of any landscape into the consciousness of one’s day’s work is more to be desired than much riches. When we complete our conquest, there will be no unseemly landscapes. The abundance of violated landscapes is proof that we have not yet mastered . The farmer does not have full command of his situation until the landscape is a part of his farming. Farms may be units in well-developed and pleasing landscapes beautiful in their combinations with other farms and appropriate to their setting as well as attractive in themselves. No one has a moral right to contribute unsightly factory premises or a forbidding commercial establishment to any community. The lines of utility and efficiency ought also to be the lines of beauty; and it is due every worker to have a good landscape to look upon, even though its area be very constricted. To produce bushels of wheat and marvels of machinery, to 4. From The Holy Earth (New York: Scribner, 1915), 115–119. II. CONSCIENCE 90 maintain devastating military establishments, do not comprise the sum of conquest. The backgrounds must be kept. If moral strength comes from good and sufficient scenery, so does the preservation of it become a social duty. It is much more than a civic obligation . But the resources of the earth must be available to man for his use and this necessarily means a modification of the original scenery. Some pieces and kinds of scenery are above all economic use and should be kept wholly in the natural state. Much of it may yield to modification if he takes good care to preserve its essential features. Unfortunately, the engineer seems not often to be trained in the values of scenery and he is likely to despoil a landscape or at least to leave it raw and unfinished. On the other hand, there is unfortunately a feeling abroad that any modi- fication of a striking landscape is violation and despoliation; and unwarranted opposition, in some cases amounting almost to prudery, follows any needful work of utilization. Undoubtedly the farmer and builder and promoter have been too unmindful of the effect of their interference on scenery, and particularly in taking little care in the disposition of wastes and in the healing of wounds; but a work either of farming or of construction may add interest and even lines of beauty to a landscape and endow it with the suggestion of human interest. If care were taken in the construction of public and semipublic work to reshape the banks into pleasing lines, to clean up, to care for, to plant, to erect structures of good proportions whether they cost much or little, and to give proper regard to the sensibilities of the communities, most of the present agitation against interference with natural scenery would disappear. One has only to visit the factory districts, the vacation resorts, the tenement areas, the banks of streams and gorges, to look at the faces of cliffs and at many engineering enterprises and at numberless farmyards, to find examples of the disregard of men for the materials that they handle. It is as much our obligation to hold the scenery reverently as to handle the products reverently. Man found the earth looking well. Humanity began in a garden. The keeping of the good earth depends on preservation rather than on...

Share