May, 1919 AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 103 
as a child to the beauty of the bark and foliage of trees, and point out their 
individuality and infinite variety of form and color. What seems to me even 
more remarkable, she taught me to see and admire their wierd beauty, after 
Fig. 24. Henry W. HeENSHAW—IN 19138. 
they were stripped of their foliage, especially as their branches were being 
bent and tossed by the eager winds of autumn and winter. She never studied 
