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Ririro · Kids Books

The Building Plan Of The Cherry Blossom

kids-books--the-building-plan-of-the-cherry-blossom

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Rule Cleanup

Displayed from tts_chunks

One day your teacher brought to school a branch broken from the cherry tree. This she placed in water, standing the tumbler on the sunny window sill; and now its buds have burst into a glory of white blossoms.

To-day I want you to study the flower of the cherry; for if you know all about this flower, which is put together in a rather simple way, one that is easy to study, it will not be so difficult for you to understand other, less simple flowers.

You may wonder why I do not wait till the cherry tree outside is in blossom; but if we waited till May, other flowers, which are not built on quite so simple a plan, would have come and gone, and you would not have been able to understand them so well as if you had first studied the simple make-up of the cherry blossom.

Last fall we learned a little about this flower, but we had only its picture to help us in our work: so I think it well to begin all over again.

In looking at the cherry blossom, we should first notice the green cup which holds the rest of the flower.

This cup is divided into five green leaves.

During the babyhood of the flower, when it was quite too young to face the cold, windy world, these green leaves were folded together so as to shut away from all harm its more delicate parts.

Above this green cup we see a circle made up of five white leaves. These pretty leaves are spread outward as if they were quite proud of themselves, and eager to attract attention.

And that is just what they are trying to do; for the cherry blossom is not wise enough to know that here in the schoolroom there are no bee visitors to bring it yellow dust, and to help it grow into a cherry. These leaves are the little handkerchiefs which the cherry tree, just like the apple tree we read about long ago, uses in signaling the bees.

Within the circle of white leaves you see a quantity of what we named "pins with dust boxes." You remember that these dust boxes hold the powdery material which is as wonderful as Cinderella's fairy godmother in its power to do strange and surprising things.

And in the very center of the flower you find a single "pin," as we called it, with a flat top which is not a dust box.

But you remember that at the foot of this pin is another sort of box, a seedbox.

And you have not forgotten that it is on the flat top of this pin that the bee brushes the yellow dust which gives new life to the seed below, and turns the little case of the seedbox into the juicy cherry.

So now what do we find in the cherry blossom? We find

Here you have the plan on which the cherry blossom is built (for flowers, like houses, are built on different plans), and the building plan of the cherry blossom is one of the simplest of all. So it is well, before studying more difficult flowers, to feel quite at home with this one. And you must try to remember first what work each part of the flower is expected to perform; for you see that the leaves of the green cup, the pretty white leaves, the pins with dust boxes, and the pin with a seedbox, have each and all their special task, - a task which they alone are able to accomplish.

Now, in talking about a flower it is troublesome to use a great many words where one would answer every purpose, so I will tell you what these different parts of the flower have been named; and by taking a little trouble to remember these names, we can save a good deal of time.

The green cup is called the "calyx."

"Calyx" is a Greek word meaning "cup."

The circle of leaves which grow above the green cup or calyx is called the "corolla."

"Corolla" comes from a word which means "crown."

The pins with dust boxes are called "stamens."

"Stamen" comes from a word meaning "to stand."

The pin with a seedbox is called the "pistil."

"Pistil" is another form of the word "pestle." A pestle is an instrument used in the drug shops for pounding and mixing medicines. You might ask to look at one the next time you are sent to the drug shop, and then you can see for yourselves if it really looks like its namesake, the pin with a seedbox.

Perhaps at first you may find it a little difficult to bear in mind these four words with their meanings; but soon they will become quite easy, and will save you much trouble.

Green cup, - calyx.

Circle of flower leaves, - corolla.

Pins with dust boxes, - stamens.

Pin with seedbox, - pistil.

If you remember the names of these four parts of the flower, how the different parts look, and what they do, you will have made a good start in the study of flowers.

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  "summary": "\"The Building Plan Of The Cherry Blossom\" introduces young readers to the anatomy of a cherry blossom through a warm, classroom-style nature lesson. A teacher places a blossoming cherry branch on a sunny window sill, and the lesson unfolds around its four key parts — the calyx, corolla, stamens, and pistil. Using vivid comparisons, like bees as dust-carrying messengers and the pistil as Cinderella's fairy godmother, the story makes botanical science feel genuinely magical and within reach.",
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    "One day your teacher brought to school a branch broken from the cherry tree. This she placed in water, standing the tumbler on the sunny window sill; and now its buds have burst into a glory of white blossoms.",
    "To-day I want you to study the flower of the cherry; for if you know all about this flower, which is put together in a rather simple way, one that is easy to study, it will not be so difficult for you to understand other, less simple flowers.",
    "You may wonder why I do not wait till the cherry tree outside is in blossom; but if we waited till May, other flowers, which are not built on quite so simple a plan, would have come and gone, and you would not have been able to understand them so well as if you had first studied the simple make-up of the cherry blossom.",
    "Last fall we learned a little about this flower, but we had only its picture to help us in our work: so I think it well to begin all over again.",
    "In looking at the cherry blossom, we should first notice the green cup which holds the rest of the flower.",
    "This cup is divided into five green leaves.",
    "During the babyhood of the flower, when it was quite too young to face the cold, windy world, these green leaves were folded together so as to shut away from all harm its more delicate parts.",
    "Above this green cup we see a circle made up of five white leaves. These pretty leaves are spread outward as if they were quite proud of themselves, and eager to attract attention.",
    "And that is just what they are trying to do; for the cherry blossom is not wise enough to know that here in the schoolroom there are no bee visitors to bring it yellow dust, and to help it grow into a cherry. These leaves are the little handkerchiefs which the cherry tree, just like the apple tree we read about long ago, uses in signaling the bees.",
    "Within the circle of white leaves you see a quantity of what we named “pins with dust boxes.” You remember that these dust boxes hold the powdery material which is as wonderful as Cinderella’s fairy godmother in its power to do strange and surprising things.",
    "And in the very center of the flower you find a single “pin,” as we called it, with a flat top which is not a dust box.",
    "But you remember that at the foot of this pin is another sort of box, a seedbox.",
    "And you have not forgotten that it is on the flat top of this pin that the bee brushes the yellow dust which gives new life to the seed below, and turns the little case of the seedbox into the juicy cherry.",
    "So now what do we find in the cherry blossom? We find",
    "Here you have the plan on which the cherry blossom is built (for flowers, like houses, are built on different plans), and the building plan of the cherry blossom is one of the simplest of all. So it is well, before studying more difficult flowers, to feel quite at home with this one. And you must try to remember first what work each part of the flower is expected to perform; for you see that the leaves of the green cup, the pretty white leaves, the pins with dust boxes, and the pin with a seedbox, have each and all their special task,—a task which they alone are able to accomplish.",
    "Now, in talking about a flower it is troublesome to use a great many words where one would answer every purpose, so I will tell you what these different parts of the flower have been named; and by taking a little trouble to remember these names, we can save a good deal of time.",
    "The green cup is called the “calyx.”",
    "“Calyx” is a Greek word meaning “cup.”",
    "The circle of leaves which grow above the green cup or calyx is called the “corolla.”",
    "“Corolla” comes from a word which means “crown.”",
    "The pins with dust boxes are called “stamens.”",
    "“Stamen” comes from a word meaning “to stand.”",
    "The pin with a seedbox is called the “pistil.”",
    "“Pistil” is another form of the word “pestle.” A pestle is an instrument used in the drug shops for pounding and mixing medicines. You might ask to look at one the next time you are sent to the drug shop, and then you can see for yourselves if it really looks like its namesake, the pin with a seedbox.",
    "Perhaps at first you may find it a little difficult to bear in mind these four words with their meanings; but soon they will become quite easy, and will save you much trouble.",
    "Green cup,—calyx.",
    "Circle of flower leaves,—corolla.",
    "Pins with dust boxes,—stamens.",
    "Pin with seedbox,—pistil.",
    "If you remember the names of these four parts of the flower, how the different parts look, and what they do, you will have made a good start in the study of flowers.",
    "Mrs. William Starr Dana was an American nature writer best known for her influential works on botany and wildflowers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This piece reflects her gift for translating scientific observation into language accessible and engaging for children. Her approach of building from simple forms — like the cherry blossom — to more complex ones mirrors the progressive educational philosophy of her era."
  ],
  "body_text": "One day your teacher brought to school a branch broken from the cherry tree. This she placed in water, standing the tumbler on the sunny window sill; and now its buds have burst into a glory of white blossoms.\n\nTo-day I want you to study the flower of the cherry; for if you know all about this flower, which is put together in a rather simple way, one that is easy to study, it will not be so difficult for you to understand other, less simple flowers.\n\nYou may wonder why I do not wait till the cherry tree outside is in blossom; but if we waited till May, other flowers, which are not built on quite so simple a plan, would have come and gone, and you would not have been able to understand them so well as if you had first studied the simple make-up of the cherry blossom.\n\nLast fall we learned a little about this flower, but we had only its picture to help us in our work: so I think it well to begin all over again.\n\nIn looking at the cherry blossom, we should first notice the green cup which holds the rest of the flower.\n\nThis cup is divided into five green leaves.\n\nDuring the babyhood of the flower, when it was quite too young to face the cold, windy world, these green leaves were folded together so as to shut away from all harm its more delicate parts.\n\nAbove this green cup we see a circle made up of five white leaves. These pretty leaves are spread outward as if they were quite proud of themselves, and eager to attract attention.\n\nAnd that is just what they are trying to do; for the cherry blossom is not wise enough to know that here in the schoolroom there are no bee visitors to bring it yellow dust, and to help it grow into a cherry. These leaves are the little handkerchiefs which the cherry tree, just like the apple tree we read about long ago, uses in signaling the bees.\n\nWithin the circle of white leaves you see a quantity of what we named “pins with dust boxes.” You remember that these dust boxes hold the powdery material which is as wonderful as Cinderella’s fairy godmother in its power to do strange and surprising things.\n\nAnd in the very center of the flower you find a single “pin,” as we called it, with a flat top which is not a dust box.\n\nBut you remember that at the foot of this pin is another sort of box, a seedbox.\n\nAnd you have not forgotten that it is on the flat top of this pin that the bee brushes the yellow dust which gives new life to the seed below, and turns the little case of the seedbox into the juicy cherry.\n\nSo now what do we find in the cherry blossom? We find\n\nHere you have the plan on which the cherry blossom is built (for flowers, like houses, are built on different plans), and the building plan of the cherry blossom is one of the simplest of all. So it is well, before studying more difficult flowers, to feel quite at home with this one. And you must try to remember first what work each part of the flower is expected to perform; for you see that the leaves of the green cup, the pretty white leaves, the pins with dust boxes, and the pin with a seedbox, have each and all their special task,—a task which they alone are able to accomplish.\n\nNow, in talking about a flower it is troublesome to use a great many words where one would answer every purpose, so I will tell you what these different parts of the flower have been named; and by taking a little trouble to remember these names, we can save a good deal of time.\n\nThe green cup is called the “calyx.”\n\n“Calyx” is a Greek word meaning “cup.”\n\nThe circle of leaves which grow above the green cup or calyx is called the “corolla.”\n\n“Corolla” comes from a word which means “crown.”\n\nThe pins with dust boxes are called “stamens.”\n\n“Stamen” comes from a word meaning “to stand.”\n\nThe pin with a seedbox is called the “pistil.”\n\n“Pistil” is another form of the word “pestle.” A pestle is an instrument used in the drug shops for pounding and mixing medicines. You might ask to look at one the next time you are sent to the drug shop, and then you can see for yourselves if it really looks like its namesake, the pin with a seedbox.\n\nPerhaps at first you may find it a little difficult to bear in mind these four words with their meanings; but soon they will become quite easy, and will save you much trouble.\n\nGreen cup,—calyx.\n\nCircle of flower leaves,—corolla.\n\nPins with dust boxes,—stamens.\n\nPin with seedbox,—pistil.\n\nIf you remember the names of these four parts of the flower, how the different parts look, and what they do, you will have made a good start in the study of flowers.\n\nMrs. William Starr Dana was an American nature writer best known for her influential works on botany and wildflowers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This piece reflects her gift for translating scientific observation into language accessible and engaging for children. Her approach of building from simple forms — like the cherry blossom — to more complex ones mirrors the progressive educational philosophy of her era.",
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    "One day your teacher brought to school a branch broken from the cherry tree. This she placed in water, standing the tumbler on the sunny window sill; and now its buds have burst into a glory of white blossoms.",
    "To-day I want you to study the flower of the cherry; for if you know all about this flower, which is put together in a rather simple way, one that is easy to study, it will not be so difficult for you to understand other, less simple flowers.",
    "You may wonder why I do not wait till the cherry tree outside is in blossom; but if we waited till May, other flowers, which are not built on quite so simple a plan, would have come and gone, and you would not have been able to understand them so well as if you had first studied the simple make-up of the cherry blossom.",
    "Last fall we learned a little about this flower, but we had only its picture to help us in our work: so I think it well to begin all over again.",
    "In looking at the cherry blossom, we should first notice the green cup which holds the rest of the flower.",
    "This cup is divided into five green leaves.",
    "During the babyhood of the flower, when it was quite too young to face the cold, windy world, these green leaves were folded together so as to shut away from all harm its more delicate parts.",
    "Above this green cup we see a circle made up of five white leaves. These pretty leaves are spread outward as if they were quite proud of themselves, and eager to attract attention.",
    "And that is just what they are trying to do; for the cherry blossom is not wise enough to know that here in the schoolroom there are no bee visitors to bring it yellow dust, and to help it grow into a cherry. These leaves are the little handkerchiefs which the cherry tree, just like the apple tree we read about long ago, uses in signaling the bees.",
    "Within the circle of white leaves you see a quantity of what we named \"pins with dust boxes.\" You remember that these dust boxes hold the powdery material which is as wonderful as Cinderella's fairy godmother in its power to do strange and surprising things.",
    "And in the very center of the flower you find a single \"pin,\" as we called it, with a flat top which is not a dust box.",
    "But you remember that at the foot of this pin is another sort of box, a seedbox.",
    "And you have not forgotten that it is on the flat top of this pin that the bee brushes the yellow dust which gives new life to the seed below, and turns the little case of the seedbox into the juicy cherry.",
    "So now what do we find in the cherry blossom? We find",
    "Here you have the plan on which the cherry blossom is built (for flowers, like houses, are built on different plans), and the building plan of the cherry blossom is one of the simplest of all. So it is well, before studying more difficult flowers, to feel quite at home with this one. And you must try to remember first what work each part of the flower is expected to perform; for you see that the leaves of the green cup, the pretty white leaves, the pins with dust boxes, and the pin with a seedbox, have each and all their special task, - a task which they alone are able to accomplish.",
    "Now, in talking about a flower it is troublesome to use a great many words where one would answer every purpose, so I will tell you what these different parts of the flower have been named; and by taking a little trouble to remember these names, we can save a good deal of time.",
    "The green cup is called the \"calyx.\"",
    "\"Calyx\" is a Greek word meaning \"cup.\"",
    "The circle of leaves which grow above the green cup or calyx is called the \"corolla.\"",
    "\"Corolla\" comes from a word which means \"crown.\"",
    "The pins with dust boxes are called \"stamens.\"",
    "\"Stamen\" comes from a word meaning \"to stand.\"",
    "The pin with a seedbox is called the \"pistil.\"",
    "\"Pistil\" is another form of the word \"pestle.\" A pestle is an instrument used in the drug shops for pounding and mixing medicines. You might ask to look at one the next time you are sent to the drug shop, and then you can see for yourselves if it really looks like its namesake, the pin with a seedbox.",
    "Perhaps at first you may find it a little difficult to bear in mind these four words with their meanings; but soon they will become quite easy, and will save you much trouble.",
    "Green cup, - calyx.",
    "Circle of flower leaves, - corolla.",
    "Pins with dust boxes, - stamens.",
    "Pin with seedbox, - pistil.",
    "If you remember the names of these four parts of the flower, how the different parts look, and what they do, you will have made a good start in the study of flowers."
  ],
  "clean_text": "One day your teacher brought to school a branch broken from the cherry tree. This she placed in water, standing the tumbler on the sunny window sill; and now its buds have burst into a glory of white blossoms.\n\nTo-day I want you to study the flower of the cherry; for if you know all about this flower, which is put together in a rather simple way, one that is easy to study, it will not be so difficult for you to understand other, less simple flowers.\n\nYou may wonder why I do not wait till the cherry tree outside is in blossom; but if we waited till May, other flowers, which are not built on quite so simple a plan, would have come and gone, and you would not have been able to understand them so well as if you had first studied the simple make-up of the cherry blossom.\n\nLast fall we learned a little about this flower, but we had only its picture to help us in our work: so I think it well to begin all over again.\n\nIn looking at the cherry blossom, we should first notice the green cup which holds the rest of the flower.\n\nThis cup is divided into five green leaves.\n\nDuring the babyhood of the flower, when it was quite too young to face the cold, windy world, these green leaves were folded together so as to shut away from all harm its more delicate parts.\n\nAbove this green cup we see a circle made up of five white leaves. These pretty leaves are spread outward as if they were quite proud of themselves, and eager to attract attention.\n\nAnd that is just what they are trying to do; for the cherry blossom is not wise enough to know that here in the schoolroom there are no bee visitors to bring it yellow dust, and to help it grow into a cherry. These leaves are the little handkerchiefs which the cherry tree, just like the apple tree we read about long ago, uses in signaling the bees.\n\nWithin the circle of white leaves you see a quantity of what we named \"pins with dust boxes.\" You remember that these dust boxes hold the powdery material which is as wonderful as Cinderella's fairy godmother in its power to do strange and surprising things.\n\nAnd in the very center of the flower you find a single \"pin,\" as we called it, with a flat top which is not a dust box.\n\nBut you remember that at the foot of this pin is another sort of box, a seedbox.\n\nAnd you have not forgotten that it is on the flat top of this pin that the bee brushes the yellow dust which gives new life to the seed below, and turns the little case of the seedbox into the juicy cherry.\n\nSo now what do we find in the cherry blossom? We find\n\nHere you have the plan on which the cherry blossom is built (for flowers, like houses, are built on different plans), and the building plan of the cherry blossom is one of the simplest of all. So it is well, before studying more difficult flowers, to feel quite at home with this one. And you must try to remember first what work each part of the flower is expected to perform; for you see that the leaves of the green cup, the pretty white leaves, the pins with dust boxes, and the pin with a seedbox, have each and all their special task, - a task which they alone are able to accomplish.\n\nNow, in talking about a flower it is troublesome to use a great many words where one would answer every purpose, so I will tell you what these different parts of the flower have been named; and by taking a little trouble to remember these names, we can save a good deal of time.\n\nThe green cup is called the \"calyx.\"\n\n\"Calyx\" is a Greek word meaning \"cup.\"\n\nThe circle of leaves which grow above the green cup or calyx is called the \"corolla.\"\n\n\"Corolla\" comes from a word which means \"crown.\"\n\nThe pins with dust boxes are called \"stamens.\"\n\n\"Stamen\" comes from a word meaning \"to stand.\"\n\nThe pin with a seedbox is called the \"pistil.\"\n\n\"Pistil\" is another form of the word \"pestle.\" A pestle is an instrument used in the drug shops for pounding and mixing medicines. You might ask to look at one the next time you are sent to the drug shop, and then you can see for yourselves if it really looks like its namesake, the pin with a seedbox.\n\nPerhaps at first you may find it a little difficult to bear in mind these four words with their meanings; but soon they will become quite easy, and will save you much trouble.\n\nGreen cup, - calyx.\n\nCircle of flower leaves, - corolla.\n\nPins with dust boxes, - stamens.\n\nPin with seedbox, - pistil.\n\nIf you remember the names of these four parts of the flower, how the different parts look, and what they do, you will have made a good start in the study of flowers.",
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    "One day your teacher brought to school a branch broken from the cherry tree. This she placed in water, standing the tumbler on the sunny window sill; and now its buds have burst into a glory of white blossoms.",
    "To-day I want you to study the flower of the cherry; for if you know all about this flower, which is put together in a rather simple way, one that is easy to study, it will not be so difficult for you to understand other, less simple flowers.",
    "You may wonder why I do not wait till the cherry tree outside is in blossom; but if we waited till May, other flowers, which are not built on quite so simple a plan, would have come and gone, and you would not have been able to understand them so well as if you had first studied the simple make-up of the cherry blossom.",
    "Last fall we learned a little about this flower, but we had only its picture to help us in our work: so I think it well to begin all over again.",
    "In looking at the cherry blossom, we should first notice the green cup which holds the rest of the flower.",
    "This cup is divided into five green leaves.",
    "During the babyhood of the flower, when it was quite too young to face the cold, windy world, these green leaves were folded together so as to shut away from all harm its more delicate parts.",
    "Above this green cup we see a circle made up of five white leaves. These pretty leaves are spread outward as if they were quite proud of themselves, and eager to attract attention.",
    "And that is just what they are trying to do; for the cherry blossom is not wise enough to know that here in the schoolroom there are no bee visitors to bring it yellow dust, and to help it grow into a cherry. These leaves are the little handkerchiefs which the cherry tree, just like the apple tree we read about long ago, uses in signaling the bees.",
    "Within the circle of white leaves you see a quantity of what we named \"pins with dust boxes.\" You remember that these dust boxes hold the powdery material which is as wonderful as Cinderella's fairy godmother in its power to do strange and surprising things.",
    "And in the very center of the flower you find a single \"pin,\" as we called it, with a flat top which is not a dust box.",
    "But you remember that at the foot of this pin is another sort of box, a seedbox.",
    "And you have not forgotten that it is on the flat top of this pin that the bee brushes the yellow dust which gives new life to the seed below, and turns the little case of the seedbox into the juicy cherry.",
    "So now what do we find in the cherry blossom? We find",
    "Here you have the plan on which the cherry blossom is built (for flowers, like houses, are built on different plans), and the building plan of the cherry blossom is one of the simplest of all. So it is well, before studying more difficult flowers, to feel quite at home with this one. And you must try to remember first what work each part of the flower is expected to perform; for you see that the leaves of the green cup, the pretty white leaves, the pins with dust boxes, and the pin with a seedbox, have each and all their special task, - a task which they alone are able to accomplish.",
    "Now, in talking about a flower it is troublesome to use a great many words where one would answer every purpose, so I will tell you what these different parts of the flower have been named; and by taking a little trouble to remember these names, we can save a good deal of time.",
    "The green cup is called the \"calyx.\"",
    "\"Calyx\" is a Greek word meaning \"cup.\"",
    "The circle of leaves which grow above the green cup or calyx is called the \"corolla.\"",
    "\"Corolla\" comes from a word which means \"crown.\"",
    "The pins with dust boxes are called \"stamens.\"",
    "\"Stamen\" comes from a word meaning \"to stand.\"",
    "The pin with a seedbox is called the \"pistil.\"",
    "\"Pistil\" is another form of the word \"pestle.\" A pestle is an instrument used in the drug shops for pounding and mixing medicines. You might ask to look at one the next time you are sent to the drug shop, and then you can see for yourselves if it really looks like its namesake, the pin with a seedbox.",
    "Perhaps at first you may find it a little difficult to bear in mind these four words with their meanings; but soon they will become quite easy, and will save you much trouble.",
    "Green cup, - calyx.",
    "Circle of flower leaves, - corolla.",
    "Pins with dust boxes, - stamens.",
    "Pin with seedbox, - pistil.",
    "If you remember the names of these four parts of the flower, how the different parts look, and what they do, you will have made a good start in the study of flowers."
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