George Forster’s Early Youth 0 ▲ Far Outliers 9 hours ago · History · hide · 0 comments From The Traveler: One Man’s Quest for Humanity from the South Seas to Revolutionary Paris, by Andrea Wulf (Knopf, 2026), Kindle pp. 27-28: George Forster was ten when he went on his first expedition. He was a slender boy, small for his age, but what he lacked in physical strength he made up for in tenacity during the five months that he and his father travelled through Russia. In charge of collecting and identifying plants, the ten-year-old would wander off alone, eyes wide open, searching for new discoveries—sometimes climbing trees, at others keeping his head near the ground to study the vegetation with a magnifying glass. When he returned to the tent with full bags, he would press the samples he had found between paper, carefully arranging blossoms and leaves so that he could classify them later. Soon his collection had risen to 700 specimens. While other children sat on hard benches in orderly rows at school, learning by rod and rote, George found himself galloping on small… No comments yet. Log in to reply on the Fediverse. Comments will appear here.