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“...The seasons, like greater tides, ebb and flow across the continents. Spring advances up the United States at an average rate of about fifteen miles per day. It ascends mountainsides at the rate of about a hundred feet a day. It sweeps ahead like a flood of water, racing down the long valleys, creeping up hillsides in a rising tide. Most of us, like the man who lives on a bank of a river and watches a stream flow by, see only one phase of the movement of spring. Each year the season advances toward us out of the south, sweeps around us, goes flooding away to the north. We see all the phases of a single phase, all the variations of this one chapter in the Odyssey of Spring. My wife and I dreamed of knowing something of all the phases, of reading all possible chapters, of seeing, firsthand, the long northward flow of the season…”