Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts

Monday, April 19, 2021

Trout lilies.

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These are all photos by Meade, taken yesterday on the shore of Lake Mendota.

Saturday, April 17, 2021

Magnolia, scilla, fritillaria.

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Flowers in Madison, this past week. The magnolia was in the arb, the frittilaria and the scilla on the Meadhouse property.

Thursday, April 15, 2021

Helleborus.

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I can never remember the name of this flower. 

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It's Helleborus. It looks a lot like another flower I have trouble remembering, Ranunculus. Ridiculous! I end up referring to it as "Homunculus," which I know is wrong, but amuses me to say. In truth, a "homunculus" is...

... a representation of a small human being. Popularized in sixteenth-century alchemy and nineteenth-century fiction, it has historically referred to the creation of a miniature, fully formed human.... 

The homunculus first appears by name in alchemical writings attributed to Paracelsus (1493–1541). De natura rerum (1537) outlines his method for creating homunculi: That the sperm of a man be putrefied by itself in a sealed cucurbit for forty days with the highest degree of putrefaction in a horse's womb, or at least so long that it comes to life and moves itself, and stirs, which is easily observed. After this time, it will look somewhat like a man, but transparent, without a body. If, after this, it be fed wisely with the Arcanum of human blood, and be nourished for up to forty weeks, and be kept in the even heat of the horse's womb, a living human child grows therefrom, with all its members like another child, which is born of a woman, but much smaller.

That's rather crazy, no? Here's a picture of Paracelsus:

Excellent! From the Wikipedia article about him:

Paracelsus was born in Egg, a village close to the Etzel Pass in Einsiedeln, Schwyz....
That doesn't sound real — Egg... Etzel... Schwyz!
He was prone to many outbursts of abusive language, abhorred untested theory, and ridiculed anybody who placed more importance on titles than practice...
His hermetical beliefs were that sickness and health in the body relied upon the harmony of humans (microcosm) and nature (macrocosm).....
An example of this correspondence is the doctrine of signatures used to identify curative powers of plants. If a plant looked like a part of the body, then this signified its ability to cure this given anatomy. Therefore, the root of the orchid looks like a testicle and can therefore heal any testicle-associated illness.... 
Paracelsus viewed the universe as one coherent organism that is pervaded by a uniting lifegiving spirit, and this in its entirety, humans included, was 'God.'... 
Paracelsus also described four elemental beings, each corresponding to one of the four elements: Salamanders, which correspond to fire; Gnomes, corresponding to earth; Undines, corresponding to water; and Sylphs, corresponding to air.

Salamanders, Gnomes, Undines, and Sylphs — How exciting science was in the 16th century!

FROM THE EMAIL: Caroline writes: 

Down here in Texas Helleborus is known as Lenten Rose.

Yes, we say that too. Somehow, I also find that hard to remember too. I think it's like Easter lily, but it's not Easter lily....

Enjoyed your discussion of Paracelsus. I tend to think those guardians of an ancient wisdom knew so much more than we deracinated moderns. For instance, a worldview that takes Creation as a given, and homo sapiens’ call to live in harmony with it. My theory is that the obsession with climate « change » is a misguided response to a near universal inkling that the way we are living is neither sustainable nor tending toward human flourishing. Modern man is profoundly out of synch with created order, having seized control of his fertility, sexuality, gender, and genetic material. We long to live in harmony with the environment because the longing is written on our hearts. At the same time, we want to be as gods, dispensing life and death as befits our disordered desires. So we focus relentlessly on CO2 and gmos even though we are gmos, secreting our synthetic, performance enhancing, baby suppressing hormones into rivers and streams. Kind of like focusing on The Confederacy instead of the septicemia infecting our institutions. Cf Walker Percy.

AND: A reader named Chris who has been told he looks like Paracelsus asserts that you can't talk about Paracelsus without bringing up this quote of his: "The dose makes the poison."

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

It's the time of year to go to Governor Nelson State Park and see the Dutchman's breeches.

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"Dutchman's breeches is one of many plants whose seeds are spread by ants, a process called myrmecochory. The ants take the seeds to their nest, where they eat the elaiosomes, and put the seeds in their nest debris, where they are protected until they germinate. They also get the added bonus of growing in a medium made richer by the ant nest debris." 

"Governor Nelson State Park is a 422-acre Wisconsin state park... on the north shore of Lake Mendota. It is named for former Wisconsin Governor Gaylord Nelson [founder of Earth Day]... Away from the lake one can find restored prairie and savanna, effigy mounds, hiking trails and ski trails.... A portion of the site of the park originally hosted a boys' camp called Camp Indianola. Orson Welles was a camper at the camp in his youth."

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Campus today.

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Note the forsythia in the background. There's lots of forsythia blooming around campus, so if yellow is your favorite color, now is your time:

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And I got my own view of the brutalist building that dropped a slab of concrete on that walkway: 

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Tuesday, April 6, 2021