
In a cramped editorial office, a young magazine editor is interrupted by a tall, dust‑caked stranger who arrives in a long duster and a reflective beard. The visitor is not there to discuss circulation or ads; he wants the name of the poet behind a haunting piece titled “Underbrush,” signed only as “White Violet.” Their tense exchange quickly reveals that the poem’s power lies not just in its words but in the raw, elemental truth it seems to capture.
The stranger, a lumberman from the remote forests of Mendocino, speaks of the wilderness with a reverence that borders on the spiritual, hinting that the verses echo the very pulse of the woods. As the editor grapples with the request—balancing journalistic ethics, anonymity, and a growing sense of unease—the encounter opens a window onto a world where poetry, nature, and hidden motives intersect. The scene sets the stage for a quiet, unsettling investigation into identity, art, and the secrets that linger in the green shadows.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (310K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Donald Lainson; David Widger
Release date
2006-05-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1836–1902
Best known for bringing Gold Rush California vividly to life, this 19th-century writer mixed humor, pathos, and sharp observation in stories that helped shape the American short story. His frontier tales, especially "The Luck of Roaring Camp" and "The Outcasts of Poker Flat," made him one of the most widely read authors of his day.
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