This volume contains a fantastic collection of nature poetry by American
journalist Charles Fletcher Lummis. "Under the Maples" is highly
recommended for fans of nature writing and poetry, and it is not to be
missed by collectors of Lummis's beautiful work. Charles Fletcher Lummis
(1859 - 1928) was an American journalist and activist for Native
American rights and preservation. He was a traveller in the American
Southwest, and became famous there as an historian, ethnographer,
photographer, archaeologist, librarian, and poet. Other notable works by
this author include: "New Mexican Folk Songs" (1952), "General Crook and
the Apache Wars" (1966), "Bullying The Moqui" (1968). Contents include:
"The Falling Leaves", "The Pleasures Of A Naturalist", "The Flight Of
Birds", "Bird Intimacies", "A Midsummer Idyl", "Near Views Of Wild
Life", "With Roosevelt At Pine Knot", "A Strenuous Holiday", "Under
Genial Skies", "A Sheaf Of Nature Notes", "Ruminations", etc. Many
vintage books such as this are becoming increasingly scarce and
expensive. We are republishing this volume now in an affordable, modern,
high-quality edition complete with a specially commissioned new
biography of the author.