THISTLE. —ASPEN TREE. 
171 
-the broom, 
Yellow and bright as bullion unalloy’d, 
Her blossoms. 
THE COMMON THISTLE. 
This plant, that furnishes its seeds with wings by which 
it flies from hill to dale, too frequently intrudes itself into 
our fields, to the injury-of the farmer’s best hopes. It is 
therefore made the emblem of Importunity. 
Now where the thistle blows his feather’d seed, 
Which frolic zephyrs buffet in the air. 
FALCONER. 
Wide o’er the thistly lawn as swells the breeze, 
A whitening shower of vegetable down 
Amusive floats. 
THOMSON. 
Tough thistles chok’d the fields, and kill’d the corn, 
And an unthrifty crop of weeds was born. 
DRYDEN. 
THE ASPEN TREE. 
Higoted ignorance states that the cross was made from 
this tree, since which time the leaves have never known 
rest, and from hence the emblem seems to have originated. 
