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William Bartram: Travels and Other Writings

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Artist, author, botanist, gardener, naturalist, intrepid wilderness explorer, and self-styled “philosophical pilgrim,” William Bartram was once an abnormal figure in eighteenth-century American life. The first American to devote himself to what we would now call the environment, Bartram was once the most significant American author before Thoreau and a nature artist who rivals Audubon. He was once also a pioneering ethnographer whose works are a the most important source for the study of the Indian cultures of southeastern The usa. The Library of The usa presents the first collection of his writings and the largest gathering of his remarkable drawings ever published.

Long recognized as an American classic, Bartram’s Travels Through North and South Carolina, Georgia, East and West Florida (1791) recounts his journeys through the wilderness from 1773 to 1776 in prose famous for its celebratory intensity and lyrical profusion. In the forests, rivers, swamps, and savannahs of the South, Bartram collected botanical specimens and made wildlife drawings, observing the natural abundance around him with a vision shaped by both science and Quaker spirituality. His great descriptive passages reveal him as a poet of the landscape, finding sublime vistas in every shift of light and weather. Whether watching a roaring alligator emerging from a lake, spending the night on an uninhabited island, exuberantly cataloguing the flora of the wilderness, or enjoying the hospitality of Indian tribes, Bartram presents a moving, detailed vision of many living in harmony with nature. Thoreau, Emerson, Cooper, Chateaubriand, Coleridge (in “Kubla Khan”), and Wordsworth drew extensively on the lush imagery of the Travels, which was once the most influential pieces of American nature writing before Walden.

Also included in the volume is the sparer and more factual original report of Bartram’s Southern travels that he sent to his English patron, John Fothergill, in addition to a comprehensive collection of his scientific and ethnographic papers. Especially fascinating is his sympathetic and vividly detailed Observations on the Creek and Cherokee Indians, long unavailable.

A special feature of this edition is a rich selection of Bartram’s drawings, which share with the Travels a capacity for finding wonder in the most straightforward manifestations of nature. Among the drawings are privately owned and had been seen prior to now by only a handful of collectors. Probably the most most beautiful are produced in full color. Extensive notes, a glossary of botanical terms, a newly researched chronology of Bartram’s life, a map tracing the route of his travels, and an index guide the reader.

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