insects & flowers
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
Insects and Flowers – Friedrich G. Barth
But when the pollen has come onto the stigma, it does not burrow in
itself, for it is far too bulky; it sends fine fertilizing beings which it
contains through the stigma and into the interior of the ovary….
-Christian Konrad Sprengel, “Das entdeckte Geheimnis der Natur, 1793)
If someone loves a flower…he can say to himself: “Somewhere, my flower is
there….” But if the sheep eats the flower, in one moment all his stars will
be darkened……
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery, “The Little Prince” 1943
The corolla (except in a very few species) is colored—that is, colored other than green—so that it stands out clearly
against the green color of the plants.
-Christian Konrad Sprengel, “Das entdeckte Geheimnis der Natur, 1793)
Science advances but slowly, with halting steps. But does not therein lie
her eternal fascination? And would we not soon tire of her if she were to reveal
her ultimate truths too easily?
-Karl von Frisch, “A Biologist Remembers,” 1967
Rather, one must investigate the flowers in their natural habitat…In brief, one must try to catch Nature in the act.
-Christian Konrad Sprengel, “Das entdeckte Geheimnis der Natur, 1793)
I do not know what I seem to be to others, but to myself I seem to have been like a boy
walking on the seashore, picking up another pebble more beautiful than the one before,
while the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.
-Isaac Newton, 1726
Nature has neither coreNor shell;
She is everything at once.
-Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, “Zur Morphologie,”1820