Mimosa, German
print: 1745Percy Shelley's poem "The Sensitive Plant" (University of Adelaide e-text) is based on a natural history specimen, a member of the mimosa family. In Shelley's poem the plant is personified in a powerfully anthropomorphic way:
A Sensitive
Plant in a garden grew,
And the Spring
arose on the garden
fair,
5
But none ever
trembled and panted with bliss
It is a modest
creed, and yet
That garden
sweet, that lady
fair,
130
For love, and
beauty, and delight, "Mimosa. The Sensitive Plant": "Of the class Polygamy, one house. Naturalists have not explained the immediate cause of the collapsing of the sensitive plant" (E. Darwin, Botanic Garden, "Loves of the Plants," note I, 29). <> "Of Vegetable Animation": "The fibres of the vegetable world, as well as those of the animal, are excitable into a variety of motions by irritations of external objects. This appears particularly in the mimosa or sensitive plant, whose leaves contract on the slightest injury" (E. Darwin, Zoonomia I, 73) John Lindsay, "An Inquiry into the Nature of the motions of the Sensitive, Sleeping, and Moving Plants, Jamaica, July 1790, Letters and Papers of the Royal Society, 89. "An Inquiry into the nature of the motions of the Mimosa Pudica or Sensitive Plant," Jamaica July 1788, ibid., 85. John Ellis, "A botanical description of the Dionaea muscipula, or Venus's fly trap. A newly discovered sensitive plant: in a letter to Sir Charles Linnaeus" (London, 1770) |
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