The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 27, January, 1860 by Various
page 58 of 283 (20%)
page 58 of 283 (20%)
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and, careless of water-snake and snapping-turtle, wade in up to their
virgin bower, and bear off the dripping, fragrant prize. None but the brave deserve--lady or lily. But if the stream be too deep and wide, and the lilies are anchored far out among their broad pads,--a floral Venice, with the blue spikes and arrowy leaves of the pickerel-weed for campaniles and towers,--there are yet "lilies of the field" over which you may profitably meditate, remembering that Solomon Ben-David was not so arrayed. Two kinds there are,--one like the tiger-lily of the gardens, the petals curled back and showing the whole leopard-spotted corolla,--the other bell-shaped, rarer, and growing one only on a stalk. Both are to be found in open spaces, bush-grown fields, and airy, sunny spots. It is worth a hot and dusty June walk to get into one of those nooks. You can spend days and not exhaust the study which one little triangular bit of overgrown pasture affords,--spend them, not as a naturalist in close, patient study, because to such a one a square yard of moss is as exhaustless as the forests of Guiana to a Waterton, but as a nemophilist, taking simple delight in mere observation and individual discovery. "Many haps fall in the field Seldom seen by watchful eyes." And so all sorts of curious ways are discoverable by the mere wood-lounger. At one time your way is barred by the great portcullis of the strong threaded web of the field spider, who sits like a porter in king's livery of black and gold at his gate. Then you have a peep into the winding maelström-funnel of another of the spider family. Poe must have suffered metempsychosis into the body of a blue-bottle, when he wrote his "Descent into the Maelström"; for such an insect, hanging |
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