
A nameless traveler steps onto the untamed moors of Norway, forging a path where none existed. With a sack of provisions and a weather‑worn iron beard, he wanders northward, pausing to listen to the whisper of streams and the rustle of spruce. As he surveys the rolling hills, he finds a spot of soft heather, birch, and peat that feels right for a home, and decides to stay.
The first weeks become a lesson in hard, patient labor. He strips birch bark while the sap runs, presses it for trade, and tills the ancient, humus‑rich soil with a simple spade, learning how the land rewards careful stewardship. A pair of goats joins his solitary routine, and a passing Lapp recognizes his resolve, asking if he intends to remain. The story follows his quiet perseverance, the rhythms of the forest, and the growing bond between man and the soil he strives to tame.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (755K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1859–1952
A Nobel Prize-winning Norwegian novelist, he helped reshape modern fiction with intense, inward-looking books such as Hunger and the later classic Growth of the Soil. His legacy is powerful and complicated, with major literary influence alongside deep controversy over his support for Nazi Germany.
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