. Through the year with Thoreau. [ 17 ] on account of Miless dam having broken away andwashed off all the snow for some distance there, inthe latter part of the winter, long before it meltedelsewhere. It is a warm corner under the south sideof a wooded hill, where they are not often, if everbefore, flooded. Journal, viii, 315. May 2, 1855. The anemone is well named, for seenow the nemorosa, amid the fallen brush and leaves,trembling in the wind, so fragile. Journal, vii, 352. May 9, 1852. To Trillium Woods. These lowwoods are full of the Anemone nemorosa, half openedat this hour and gracefully


. Through the year with Thoreau. [ 17 ] on account of Miless dam having broken away andwashed off all the snow for some distance there, inthe latter part of the winter, long before it meltedelsewhere. It is a warm corner under the south sideof a wooded hill, where they are not often, if everbefore, flooded. Journal, viii, 315. May 2, 1855. The anemone is well named, for seenow the nemorosa, amid the fallen brush and leaves,trembling in the wind, so fragile. Journal, vii, 352. May 9, 1852. To Trillium Woods. These lowwoods are full of the Anemone nemorosa, half openedat this hour and gracefully drooping, — sepals witha purple tinge on the under side, now exposed. Theyare in beds and look like hail on the ground; theirnow globular flowers spot the gi-ound white. Journal, iv, 40. C i« ] RABBITS AND PARTRIDGES What is a country without rabbits and partridges?They are among the most simple and indigenousanimal products; ancient and venerable familiesknown to antiquity as to modern times; of the veryhue and substance of


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