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"source_title": "Another Cousin, The Raspberry",
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"summary": "\"The Raspberry\" invites readers to take a closer look at something they may have eaten without a second thought. Mrs. William Starr Dana places the raspberry side by side with the strawberry and blackberry, guiding readers through a simple but surprising comparison: unlike its cousins, the raspberry leaves its flower cushion behind on the plant when picked. Through careful, curious observation, the piece turns an everyday berry into a small natural wonder worth understanding.",
"clean_summary": "\"The Raspberry\" invites readers to take a closer look at something they may have eaten without a second thought. Mrs. William Starr Dana places the raspberry side by side with the strawberry and blackberry, guiding readers through a simple but surprising comparison: unlike its cousins, the raspberry leaves its flower cushion behind on the plant when picked. Through careful, curious observation, the piece turns an everyday berry into a small natural wonder worth understanding.",
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"Here we see a branch from the raspberry bush. How is the raspberry unlike both strawberry and blackberry? Let us place side by side these three berries.",
"Once more we observe that the strawberry is the flat flower cushion grown big and juicy.",
"Again we see that the seedboxes of the blackberry packed upon the swollen flower cushion make up much of the fruit.",
"But in the raspberry we find that the red, ripe seedboxes alone make the berry which is so good to eat.",
"When we pick this raspberry, we find that the flower cushion remains upon the plant, instead of coming off in our fingers and helping to make a luscious morsel, as with the other two fruits.",
"I hope you will remember how these three berries differ one from another.",
"Why the blossoms of these three plants grow into berries in three different ways, we do not know; but our time has been well spent if we remember that they do change in these three ways.",
"The more we see and question and learn, the more pleasure we shall find in our own lives, and the better able we shall be to make life pleasant for others.",
"Mrs. William Starr Dana was an American nature writer best known for her ability to make botany accessible and engaging for everyday readers. \"The Raspberry\" is drawn from her educational writing that encouraged children and curious adults alike to observe the natural world with patience and joy."
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"Again we see that the seedboxes of the blackberry packed upon the swollen flower cushion make up much of the fruit.",
"But in the raspberry we find that the red, ripe seedboxes alone make the berry which is so good to eat.",
"When we pick this raspberry, we find that the flower cushion remains upon the plant, instead of coming off in our fingers and helping to make a luscious morsel, as with the other two fruits.",
"I hope you will remember how these three berries differ one from another.",
"Why the blossoms of these three plants grow into berries in three different ways, we do not know; but our time has been well spent if we remember that they do change in these three ways.",
"The more we see and question and learn, the more pleasure we shall find in our own lives, and the better able we shall be to make life pleasant for others."
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"Here we see a branch from the raspberry bush. How is the raspberry unlike both strawberry and blackberry? Let us place side by side these three berries.",
"Once more we observe that the strawberry is the flat flower cushion grown big and juicy.",
"Again we see that the seedboxes of the blackberry packed upon the swollen flower cushion make up much of the fruit.",
"But in the raspberry we find that the red, ripe seedboxes alone make the berry which is so good to eat.",
"When we pick this raspberry, we find that the flower cushion remains upon the plant, instead of coming off in our fingers and helping to make a luscious morsel, as with the other two fruits.",
"I hope you will remember how these three berries differ one from another.",
"Why the blossoms of these three plants grow into berries in three different ways, we do not know; but our time has been well spent if we remember that they do change in these three ways.",
"The more we see and question and learn, the more pleasure we shall find in our own lives, and the better able we shall be to make life pleasant for others."
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