| Author Quoted | Kenneth H. Jackson | 
		
			| Title Quoted | Studies in Early Celtic Nature Poetry | 
		
			| Date (Year/Month/Day) | 1964/06/23 | 
		
			| Imprint | Cambridge : Cambridge University Press. 1935 | 
		
			| Quotation | Blazing hot, stuffy air, barely moved by a little breeze here in the woodshed. What a day it is going to be! Even the woods will be an airless furnace. It calls for one of those nature poems, a kerygma of heat such as the Celts never had. (Finished Kenneth Jackson's excellent book on Early Celtic Nature Poetry before Prime as the fierce sun began to burn my field.) | 
		
			| Quotation Source | Dancing in the Water of Life: Seeking Peace in the Hermitage. The Journals of Thomas Merton, Volume 5, 1963-1965.; Edited by Robert E. Daggy. / San Francisco : Harper Collins. 1997, p. 121 | 
		
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			| Link to Merton's Copy | 
  					 
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