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CHAP. 39. (25.)—THE NATURAL ORDER OF THE PRODUCTION OF PLANTS.

The following is the order in which the operations of Nature take place throughout the year. The first is fecundation, which takes place when the west wind begins to prevail, generally about the sixth day before the ides of February.1 By the agency of this wind all the productions of the earth are impregnated; to such an extent, indeed, that the mares even in Spain are impregnated by it, as we have already stated.2 This is the generating principle of the universe, and it receives its name of Favonius, as some think, from our word "fovere," which means "to warm and cherish:" it blows from due west at the opening of the spring. The peasantry call this period of the year the "time of heat,"3 because Nature is then longing to receive the seeds of her various productions, and is imparting life to everything that is planted. The vegetables conceive4 on various days, each according to its respective nature: some immediately, as with animals, others, again, more slowly, carrying with them for a longer period the produce of their conception, a state which has from that circumstance obtained the name of "germination." When the plant flowers, it may be said to bring forth, and the flower makes its appearance by bursting its little capsule, which has acted to it as an uterus. The period of training and education is the growth of the fruit. This, as well as that of germination, is a laborious process.

1 Eighth of February.

2 See B. viii. c. 67.

3 Catlitio.

4 He alludes to the period of the rising of the sap; an entirely distinct process from germination.

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  • Cross-references to this page (2):
    • Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), CRETA or CRETE
    • Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), VO´SEGUS
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