Wild Flowers Worth NoticeDavid Bogne, 1879 - 159 pages |
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Page 64
Phebe Lankester. ris . in 1 1 This is wito ay du falas (. A62 Santraga Hisz ... . 2. SAXERALE MARSH PENNYWOR MISTLETOE . Viscum Album . HONEYSUCKLE . Lonicera Periclymenum .
Phebe Lankester. ris . in 1 1 This is wito ay du falas (. A62 Santraga Hisz ... . 2. SAXERALE MARSH PENNYWOR MISTLETOE . Viscum Album . HONEYSUCKLE . Lonicera Periclymenum .
Page 68
... valuable in diet on account of the salts which they contain ; but most of them are overlooked and despised in favour of more costly and cultivated herbs . MISTLETOE . VISCUM ALBUM . OUR next plant is associated 68 WILD FLOWERS .
... valuable in diet on account of the salts which they contain ; but most of them are overlooked and despised in favour of more costly and cultivated herbs . MISTLETOE . VISCUM ALBUM . OUR next plant is associated 68 WILD FLOWERS .
Page 69
... Mistletoe , or Viscum Album , is one of a genus of parasitical plants belonging to the family Loranthaceæ , and is the only British representative of the family . " Mistletoe , " says Lord Bacon , " chiefly grows on crab - trees , apple ...
... Mistletoe , or Viscum Album , is one of a genus of parasitical plants belonging to the family Loranthaceæ , and is the only British representative of the family . " Mistletoe , " says Lord Bacon , " chiefly grows on crab - trees , apple ...
Page 70
... Mistletoe Thrush " feeding upon the berries sur- rounded his beak with the viscid mucus they contain , and in order to get rid of it , rubbed his beak against the branches , and thus inserted the seeds , from which springs a new plant ...
... Mistletoe Thrush " feeding upon the berries sur- rounded his beak with the viscid mucus they contain , and in order to get rid of it , rubbed his beak against the branches , and thus inserted the seeds , from which springs a new plant ...
Page 71
... Mistletoe itself . The following experiment was performed by De Candolle . He immersed the branch of an apple - tree bearing Mistletoe in water previously coloured with cochineal , which , penetrating the wood and inner bark of the ...
... Mistletoe itself . The following experiment was performed by De Candolle . He immersed the branch of an apple - tree bearing Mistletoe in water previously coloured with cochineal , which , penetrating the wood and inner bark of the ...
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Wild Flowers Worth Notice: For Their Beauty, Associations, Or Uses Phebe Lankester No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
acrid appearance ARUM MACULATUM beautiful berries birds blossoms blue flowers botanists Botany bracts branches bright Britain British species BRYONY called Calluna calyx charming cloth Colchicum Coloured Plates contain corolla Cowslip Crown 8vo cultivated curious Daisy delicate Demy 8vo districts downy early eaten Edition England erect favourite Fcap FLOWERING RUSH gardens genus GRAPE HYACINTH green growing Harebell heath heather hedges Henbane herbs Holly Hyacinth Illustrated inches long known lanceolate leaves LILY little plant lobes long stalks lovely MALLOW MARSH meadows medicine Mistletoe NARCISSUS PSEUDONARCISSUS native NATURAL HISTORY natural order Nettles numerous oblong Ophrys Orchis ORCHIS MILITARIS ovate pale PAPAVER ARGEMONE petals plant belongs poisonous pretty plant Primrose properties purple raceme resemblance root rose SAGITTARIA SAGITTIFOLIA SAXIFRAGE Scotland seeds seen sepals smooth spring SPRING SQUILL stamens stem teazle tuft umbels vegetable VERNA Vols Vulgaris Water-cresses whole plant wild flowers woods yellow colour
Popular passages
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Page 93 - O READER ! hast thou ever stood to see The Holly Tree ? The eye that contemplates it well perceives Its glossy leaves Order'd by an intelligence so wise, As might confound the Atheist's sophistries. Below, a circling fence, its leaves are seen Wrinkled and keen ; No grazing cattle through their prickly round Can reach to wound ; But as they grow where nothing is to fear, Smooth and unarm'd the pointless leaves appear.
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Page 67 - tis, to cast one's eyes so low! The crows, and choughs, that wing the midway air, Show scarce so gross as beetles : Half way down Hangs one that gathers samphire; dreadful trade! Methinks, he seems no bigger than his head: The fishermen, that walk upon the beach, Appear like mice; and yon' tall anchoring bark, Diminish'd to her cock; her cock, a buoy Almost too small for sight: The murmuring surge.
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Page 25 - Drawing of every British Plant. Edited and brought up to the Present Standard of Scientific Knowledge by T. BOSWELL (formerly SYME), LL.DFLS, &c. With Popular Descriptions of the Uses, History, and Traditions of each Plant, by Mrs. LANKESTEB, Author of " Wild Flowers Worth Notice," " The British Ferns,
Page 29 - Containing' an Alphabetical List of the Baronets of the United Kingdom, Short Biographical Notices, Dates of Creation, Addresses, &c. 32mo, cloth, Is.