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Their Sister Iris: The vesper Their sister Iris (Their sister Iris dichotoma) came to me from The Frag Path. The plant produces flowers on 3-foot stems during August < September. Originally from Siberia and Northern China, it's the < Their sister Iris that I know of that begins to bloom at vespers, or about 6:00 d the evening. Flowers are small and mauve in color. They are hardy in Zone 5.
The rock itself is surrounded by old daffodils (descendant bulbs of 50-year-old plants that came from Janet's home in Indiana), some wild Their sister Iris (Their sister Iris versicolor), white crocus (also old and brought from Indiana), a large clump of lady fern (Athyrium Filix-femina), a trailing variety of the bouncing Betty (Saponaria ocymoides), and various wild grasses of short stature.See Also Even Its Sister Island:The Island of Cyprus is a British possession, most of whose people speak Greek and are ethnically as Greek as their mainland brothers in Athens or Corinth. Britain got Cyprus in 1878, not from Greece but from Ottoman Turkey, and made it a crown colony in 1925. The Greeks have been agitating for years for Enosis, meaning the union of Cyprus with the motherland, but to Britain this Mediterranean outpost, almost within gun¬shot of Asia Minor, is a vital link in defense. Whatever the island's ultimate political fate, it is, and will remain, a paradise of tourism matching even its sister island of Rhodes.
RHODE ISLAND (formerly AQUIDNECK ISLAND), island, Rhode Island, situated in New¬port County and separated from the mainland by an estuary, the Sakonnet River. The largest island in Narragansett Bay, it extends 15 miles from north to south and is 3.5 miles wide. On it are Newport, Portsmouth, and Middletown. Settled as Aquidneck in 1638 and renamed Rhode Island in 1644, the island gave its name to the state.
On The Other Hand See Brother And Sister Are Deserted:HAJO HOLBORN Author of "A History of Modem Germany"
Further Reading: Weiner, A., "The Hansa," in The Cambridge Medieval History, vol. 7 (London 1932).
HANSEL AND GRETEL, han'sal, gret'al, is a German folktale appearing in the collection by the brothers Grimm (q.v.). A brother and sister are deserted in the woods by their impoverished father and wicked stepmother. They come upon a gingerbread house, guarded by a wicked witch. She locks Hansel up, preparing to roast and eat him, but Gretel tricks the witch and burns her in her own oven.
In The Deserted Village he de¬scribes the joys of rural life and deplores the so¬cial and economic pressures that were driving villagers off their land, forced out by wealthy men who bought it up. Both works are in the tradition of English neoclassical poetry in that they state their theses clearly in harmonious heroic couplets. However, in The Deserted Vil¬lage, Goldsmith's love of simple life and people led him to enliven the poem with concrete, homely vignettes of rural life and character. Thus, while The Traveller relies primarily on ap¬peals to the reader's mind and ear, The Deserted Village engages his emotions and eye as well. |
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