Written for the closing plenary session of the Annual Conference of the Australasian Society of Legal Philosophy celebrating Professor Margaret Davies' recently published Law Unlimited: Materialism, Pluralism and Legal Theory (Routledge, 2017), this article addresses three of that outstanding text’s most arresting tropes, all of them cartographical: that of boundary, of crossing and of pathway. ‘Cartographical’, because the combined effect of these tropes is one of mapping, tracing the cadastres, exploring the topography, focalising a ‘bird’s eye view’ of what might be called Margaret Davies’ ‘province of jurisprudence un-determined’ and its respective realms of natural law, positivism and critique. Each of which find themselves transformed through Davies' fantastical (and fantastic) jurisprudential journeying, a 'road' that - as Bilbo Baggins, as much as Bill MacNeil would have it - 'goes ever on'.