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Asclepias Obtusifolia

Title
Asclepias Obtusifolia
Creator
Thoreau, Henry David, 1817-1862 (Creator)
Date created
September 21, 1856
Type of resource
Still image
Genre
Drawings
Format
Image
Digital origin
reformatted digital
Abstract/Description
Accompanying Journal Entry: "P.M. -- To Cliffs. Asclepias Cornuti discounting. THe seeded parachutes which I release soon come to earth, but probably if they waited for a stronger wind to release them they would be carried far. Solidago nemoralis mostly done. Aster undulatus in prime, in the dry woods just beyond Haydenís, large slanting, pyramidal panicles of some lilac-tinged, others quite white, flowers, size of Diplopappus linariifolius. Solidago altissima past prime. Prinos berries. I hear of late faint chewink notes in the shrubbery, as if they were meditating their strains in a subdued tone against another year. A. dumosus past prime. Am surprised to see on top of Cliffs, where Wheeler burned in the spring and had cut rye, by a large rock, some very large perfectly fresh Corydalis glauca, still well in bloom as well as gone to seed, two and a half feet high and five eighths of an inch thick at base. There are also many large tufts of its glaucous leaves on the black burnt ground which have not come to flower, amid the rye stubble. The bumblebees are sucking its flowers. Beside the young oak and the sprouts, poke-weeds, erechthites, and this corydalis even are common there. How far is this due to the fire, aside from the clearing? Was not the fireweed sown by the wind last fall, blown into the woods, where there was a lull which caused it to settle? Perhaps it is fitted to escape or resist fire. The wind which the fire creates may, perchance, lift it again out of harmís way. The Asclepias, obtusifolia is turned yellow. I see its often perfectly upright slender pod five inches long, thus (It soon bursts in my chamber and shows its beautiful straw-colored lining. A fairy-like casket, shaped like a canoe, with its closely packed imbricated brown seeds, with their yet compressed silvery parachutes like finest unsoiled silk in the right position above them, ready to be wafted some dry and breezy day to their destined place.): On top of Cliff, behind the big stump, a yellow white goldenrod, var. concolor, which Gray refers to Pennsylvania, apparently with the common. That is a great place for white goldenrod, now in its prime and swarming with honey-bees. Scare up turtle doves in the stubble. Uva-ursi berries quite ripe. Find, for first time in Concord, Solanum nigrum, berries apparently just ripe, by a rock northwest of corydalis. Thus I have within a week found in Concord two of the new plants I found up-country. Such is the advantage of going abroad, -- to enable [you] to detect your own plants. I detected them first abroad, because there I was looking for the strange. It is a warm and very hazy day, with wreaths of mist in horizon. Saw, in the cow-killer on railroad, a small mountain-ash naturalized!"
Notes
Journal XXII (1856-09-07 to 1857-04-01)
Subjects and keywords
plantae
herbaceous perennials
asclepias obtusifolia
Princeton Edition
PJ11
Morgan Edition
M1302:28
Torrey
TIX
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