On the banks are flowers-yarrow ,meadow-sweet ,willowherb, loosestrife, and lady's bed-straw.
2
This makeshift of a beverage was made of the four-leaved loosestrife.
3
Purple loosestrife is surely one of the worst invaders the American landscape has seen.
4
Darwin wasn't the only one who was mad about loosestrife.
5
Of winding woodways where the loosestrife nods
6
The wild-flowers are willowherb, meadow-sweet, and loosestrife.
7
The horses too were asleep in the purple loosestrife, and there was an intense peace over all things.
8
By still ponds, to which the moorhens have now returned, tall spikes of purple loosestrife rise in bunches.
9
Charles Darwin was enamored of loosestrife.
10
But at this moment Winston noticed some tufts of loosestrife growing in the cracks of the cliff beneath them.
11
The most remarkable case is that of the three different forms of the loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria) here figured (Fig.
12
Yellow loosestrife is rising, thick comfrey stands at the very edge; the sandpipers run where the shore is free from bushes.
13
The pale gold of the loosestrife had faded, but the deeper yellow of the goldenrod had begun to take its place.
14
As trade with the colonies grew, more purple loosestrife was dumped along American shores as ships jettisoned ballast before taking on cargo.
15
Still another plant in my section, which I notice has been widely distributed by the agency of water, is the spiked loosestrife.
16
Hereabouts are the flowers, tall and plenty-foxglovesand mullein, such as we have at home, and loosestrife (lysimachia), both the yellow and the purple.