Weeds: How Vagabond Plants Gatecrashed Civilisation and Changed the Way We Think About Nature
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This is a lively and lyrical cultural history of plants in the wrong place by one of Britain's best and most admired nature writers. Ever since the
first human settlements 10,000 years ago, weeds have dogged our footsteps. They are there as the punishment of 'thorns and thistles' in "Genesis" and,
two millennia later, as a symbol of "Flanders Field". They are civilisations' familiars, invading farmland and building-sites, war-zones and
flower-beds across the globe. Yet living so intimately with us, they have been a blessing too. Weeds were the first crops, the first medicines.
Burdock was the inspiration for Velcro. Cow parsley has become the fashionable adornment of Spring weddings. Weaving together the insights of
botanists, gardeners, artists and poets with his own life-long fascination, Richard Mabey examines how we have tried to define them, explain their
persistence, and draw moral lessons from them. One persons weed is another's wild beauty.
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