A 'Thousand- Mile Walk 
pierced with direct ray lances, or [the sun- 
light] passing to the earth and the lowly plants 
in filtered softness through translucent leaves. 
But in the dense Florida forests sunlight can- 
not enter. It falls on the evergreen roof and 
rebounds in long silvery lances and flashy 
spray. In many places there is not light suffi- 
cient to feed a single green leaf on these dark 
forest floors. All that the eye can reach is just 
a maze of tree stems and crooked leafless vine 
strings. All the flowers, all the verdure, all the 
glory is up in the light. 
The streams of Florida are still young, and 
in many places are untraceable. I expected to 
find these streams a little discolored from the 
vegetable matter that I knew they must con- 
tain, and I was sure that in so flat a country I 
should not find any considerable falls or long 
rapids. The streams of upper Georgia are al- 
most unapproachable in some places on ac- 
count of luxuriant bordering vines, but the 
banks are nevertheless high and well defined. 
Florida streams are not yet possessed of banks 
[ ioo ] 
