BUTTERFLY
Insects, Butterfly Seona Anderson Insects, Butterfly Seona Anderson

BUTTERFLY

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, BUTTERFLY: I saw him run after a gilded butterfly. Butterflies are a recurring motif in Coriolanus but appear elsewhere as symbols of summer and beauty. There are 59 Butterfly species in the UK.

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WASP
Insects, Wasp Seona Anderson Insects, Wasp Seona Anderson

WASP

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, WASP: Why, what a wasp-stung and impatient fool art thou. The Wasp is not usually a welcome guest at social gatherings but the 7000 species of social & solitary wasps in the UK play an important ecological role.

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TICK
Insects, Tick Seona Anderson Insects, Tick Seona Anderson

TICK

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, TICK: I had rather be a tick in a sheep than such a valiant ignorance. Ticks can carry dangerous diseases including Lyme Disease.

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LADYBIRD
Insects, Ladybird Seona Anderson Insects, Ladybird Seona Anderson

LADYBIRD

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, LADYBIRD: What, lamb! What, ladybird! Where’s this girl. What, Juliet! There are 26 species of these iconic insects in Britain.

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WORM
Insects, Worm Seona Anderson Insects, Worm Seona Anderson

WORM

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, WORM: A man may fish with a worm that hath eat of a king and eat of the fish that hath fed of that worm. Worms are remarkable undervalued creatures that maintain our soils and habitats.

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ANT/PISMIRE
Insects, Ant, Pismire Seona Anderson Insects, Ant, Pismire Seona Anderson

ANT/PISMIRE

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, ANT: We’ll set thee to school to an ant to learn that there’s no labouring i’ th’ winter. Ants were considered examples of ‘good’ insects whose organisational and social structures were considered instructional for human society.

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SLUG
Insects, Slug Seona Anderson Insects, Slug Seona Anderson

SLUG

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, SLUG: Fie, what a slug is Hastings, that he comes not to tell us whether they come or no! Slugs are often associated with slowness and Shakespeare also uses this metaphor.

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LEECH
Insects, Leech, Medicine Seona Anderson Insects, Leech, Medicine Seona Anderson

LEECH

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, LEECH: let us to France, like horse-leeches, my boys, to suck, to suck, the very blood to suck. Read about the fascinating lifecycle and medical history of Leeches.

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FLEA
Insects, Flea, Parasite Seona Anderson Insects, Flea, Parasite Seona Anderson

FLEA

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, FLEA: You may as well say that’s a valiant flea that dare eat his breakfast on the lip of a lion. Fleas have long been companions and irritants to human societies & Shakespeare does not exclude them from his poetry.

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SCORPION
Insects, Venomous, Scorpion Seona Anderson Insects, Venomous, Scorpion Seona Anderson

SCORPION

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, SCORPION: Seek not a scorpion’s nest, nor set no footing on this unkind shore. Scorpions are ancient creatures which have suffered from a bad press to become associated primarily with pain and danger.

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SILK WORM
Insects, Silk Worm, Textiles Seona Anderson Insects, Silk Worm, Textiles Seona Anderson

SILK WORM

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, SILK MOTH: marry not in ashes and sackcloth, but in new silk and old sack. The Silk Worm or Moth has provided luxury fibers for thousands of years - read more about this fascinating insect.

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Gossamers
Insects, Spider Seona Anderson Insects, Spider Seona Anderson

Gossamers

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, GOSSAMERS (Spiders): a lover may bestride the gossamers that idles in the wanton summer air, and yet not fall, so light is vanity. #shakespearespecies #folio400

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SNAIL
Insects, Snail Seona Anderson Insects, Snail Seona Anderson

SNAIL

Shakespeare Species Quote of the Day, SNAIL: Then the whining schoolboy with his satchel and shining morning face, creeping like a snail unwillingly to school

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