
A young naturalist sets out on an ambitious thousand‑mile trek from the Midwest toward the Gulf of Mexico, driven by an all‑consuming curiosity about the world’s plants. He carries nothing but a notebook, a sketchpad, and an unshakable belief that every blade of grass holds a story. As he walks, the landscape shifts from open prairies to tangled forests, and he records each new species with the meticulous eye of a seasoned botanist.
Early in the journey he confronts the practical challenges of wilderness travel—sleeping on bare ground, surviving on the occasional farmer’s loaf, and coping with a recent eye injury that threatens his detailed observations. Yet the injury proves only a minor obstacle, and his enthusiasm for cataloguing flora remains undiminished. Along the way, he meets fellow travelers and pauses in small towns, turning brief city visits into opportunities to hunt for the resilient weeds that thrive amid human bustle. The expedition unfolds as a vivid portrait of a mind eager to map nature’s hidden corners.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (227K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2019-11-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1838–1914
A wanderer, naturalist, and gifted writer, he helped shape the way Americans think about wilderness. His vivid books and journals turned mountains, forests, and glaciers into living presences on the page.
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