July 9, 1852

in Thoreau’s Journal

The red lily with its torrid color and sun-freckled spots, dispensing, too, with the outer garment of a calyx, its petals so open and wide apart that you can see through it in every direction, tells of hot weather.

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It is of a handsome bell shape, so upright, and the flower prevails over every other part. It belongs not to spring.

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