The Frogs Have More Fun...

Flowers



"All the names I know from nurse:
Gardener's garters, Shepherd's purse,
Bachelor's buttons, Lady's smock,
And the Lady Hollyhock.

Fairy places, Fairy things,
Fairy woods where the wild bee wings,
Tiny trees for tiny dames.
- These must all be Fairy names !"

(from Child's Garden of Verses
by R.L. Stevenson)


"Anyone can write a short-story.
A bad one, I mean."

(R.L. Stevenson)
----------------

"Science without conscience is the Soul's perdition."
- Francois Rabelais, Pantagruel
- Acc to/above is citated from: Medical Apartheid. The dark history of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present, by Harriet A. Washington (Doubleday ; 2006 ; p. 1.)

----------------
"In the high society of the first half of the century, marriage, despite it's bestowal status upon the wife, was the most absurdity. Marriage, conferring instanteous rank or money, ... lost most of its prestige and moment right after the wedding. ...By the end of the century, spurred by Rousseau's moralistic Nouvelle Hèloíse, a contrary cult, that of virtue, arose. After 1770 conjugal and maternal love became not merely admissible, but, for some, moral imperatives. ...

[...]
...Rousseau, who sought for himself the crown of morality in ostensibly defending marriage, presents in his Nouvelle Hèloíse the most enticing and extended defense of illicit love ever penned. The root of the problem is that as the century progressed sensibility became confused with morality: passionate feeling, if expressed in a highly civilized mode with grace and nuance, makes us forgive the Rousseau of The Confessions, for example, his pettiness, his jealousies, his betrayals. This moral-amoral byplay, present already in the novels of Richardson, was to be more intense as the century unfolded."
-
Madelyn Gutwirth : Madame De Staèl, Novelist. The emergence of the Artist as Woman (10,15.)

;
"...As the social contract seems tame in comparison with war, so fucking and sucking come to seem merely nice, and therefore unexciting. ... To be 'nice', as to be civilized, means being alienated from this savage experience - which is entirely staged. [...] The rituals of domination and enslavement being more and more practiced, the art that is more and more devoted to rendering their themes, are perhaps only a logical extension of an affluent society's tendency to turn every part of people's lives into a taste, a choice; to invite them to regard their very lives as a (life) style." - Susan Sontag , on 'Fascinating Fascism' (-74; p 103;104-5 at Under the sign of Saturn)
; "Anyone who cannot give an account to oneself of the past three thousand years remains in darkness, without experience, living from day to day." (Goethe) - as cited by Sontag (on same compile; p. 137.)

;
"It is widely accepted that we are now living in the 'Anthropocene', a new geological epoch in which the Earth's ecosystems and climate are being fundamentally altered by the activities of humans. I loathe the term, but I can't deny that it's appropriate."
; (Goulson), Silent Earth : Averting the Insect Apocalypse (2021; p 47.)
;
"It is sometimes said that humanity is at war with nature, but the word 'war' implies a two-way conflict. Our chemical onslaught on nature is more akin to genocide. It is small wonder that our wildlife is in decline."
; (Goulson, 2021 ; 118.)
;
----------------
"If we believe absurdities, we shall commit atrocities." (Voltaire)
- Citated from; (Joy, Melanie), Why We Love Dogs, Eat Pigs and Wear Cows : An Introduction to Carnism(2010; p. 95.)
;

"In the presence of the monster, you have eyes and ears for nothing else."
; (Flora Tristan) : London Journal of Flora Tristan: the Aristocracy and the Working Class of England ; 1842-edit. (tr: 1982. ; p. 71.)

;
"Every minority invokes justice, and justice is liberty.
A party can be judged of only by the doctrine which
it professes when it is the strongest."
Mdme de Staêl
(on) 'Consideration sur le Révolution de la Francaise' [1818]


10/25/12

BogFun


”[...] Further trouble was caused by the dispatch of the copies to the Frankfurt. I sent three sheets of the book in advance. The other day I took the fourth sheet with me, the moment it was dry from the press. When I reached the ship, two miles from here, I found my copy baptized overnight by Jupiter. I needed three days to dry them...”
From Kepler's letter (1619) to Quitenus Remus,
a physician at the Court in Prague (...cite/transl. is the via  
Carola Baumgardt's book; Johannes Kepler: Life and Letters p.1951).


Menyanthes trifoliata.
...Even though I don't (mostly) believe in coincidences, was perhaps a happy coincidence for to me to drop by when this particular plant was on flowering last summer.  ...It's Bogbean (Menyanthes trifoliata), some from commonest natural marsh-plants. It usually grows on places where's adequate areas from standing waters (ie fx wetland-bogland, or suitable lakeside-edges). 
What a glorious blooming!

Bogbean has quite wide range all the way to the Southern Europes about, and perhaps further to Euraasia too.  (I guess, the English name originates of the looks of the seeds - when they've developed and flower petals have drop off,  them seem resemble beans, somewhat). The leaves grow separate of the flower. And - just to mention - in the past root-growths also were believed usable fx to reducing fevers...Albeit, modern knowledge seems to notice that there's not any proven/shown evidence from that (the plant's usability as remedy). In fact, there was in the pasts lot of similar beliefs from various plant. 

But how lovely a flowering ! I must have been blessed from been around just at the moment when it was of it's nicest bloom. And what lucky coincidence ! ;(G.U.J.) 



( The latest posts! - @ Mulskinner Blog @ )


----------
Powered by
ScribeFire.

No comments: