7 research outputs found
Love Among the Roses
It was on one summer\u27s eveningin the merry month of JuneI beheld a damsel sitting \u27Mid flower\u27s sweet perfumeShe had a novel readingjust as I was passing byAnd as she turned another pageI saw the brightest eye A bewitching smile was on her faceAs charming as the posies I felt the smart of Cupid\u27s dart\u27Twas love among the roses.
CHORUSNow I hate to tell but then I must,Within her heart I place my trustShe was sitting in the garden WHere the little butterlfy reposesAnd how we met,I\u27ll ne\u27er forgwet,\u27Twas Love among the Roses.
Now I passed her house next eveningThe clock had just struck eightAnd I saw my future happinessShe was standing by the garden gateShe smile as I approached herAnd I begged her to excuse May I view those pretty flowers She murmured if you chooseI spoke about the violetsThen finally made proposesThro\u27 the garden we walked of happiness talked\u27Twas love among the roses.
I confess I love Matilda,Matilda, that\u27s her name,And there is a charm about her Which I never can explain She dresses up to fashion To her style there is no endAnd of course she must look dashingFor she wears a Grecian Bend But she\u27s left her home and where she\u27s goneMost everyone supposes For as dear as life is my little wife\u27Twas love among the roses
Please buy my last paper : I want to go home /
Mode of access: Internet.From the Thomas A. Edison Collection of American Sheet Music
Ring the bell softly /
First line of chorus: Weary with mingling life's bitter and sweet.First line of text: Someone has gone from this strange world of ours.Caption title.For voice, chorus (SATB)--and piano.Mode of access: Internet.From the Thomas A. Edison Collection of American Sheet Music
The Family Acholeplasmataceae (Including Phytoplasmas)The Prokaryotes
The family Acholeplasmataceae was originally established to
accommodate the genus Acholeplasma, comprising the mollicutes that
could be cultivated without the supplement of cholesterol and that
use UGA as a stop codon instead of coding for tryptophan. It was
later shown that the phytoplasmas, a large group of uncultivable,
wall-less, non-helical mollicutes that are associated with plants and
insects, shared taxonomically relevant properties with members of the
genus Acholeplasma. Being not cultivable in vitro in axenic culture, the
phytoplasmas could not be classified using the standards used for other
mollicutes and are named using the category of Candidatus, as “Ca.
Phytoplasma.”
Although phytoplasmas are associated with habitats and ecology
different from acholeplasmas, the two genera Acholeplasma and
“Candidatus Phytoplasma” are phylogenetically related and form a
distinct clade within the Mollicutes. The persisting inability to grow
the phytoplasmas in vitro hinders the identification of their distinctive
phenotypic traits, important criteria for mollicute classification. Until
supplemental phenotypic traits become available, the genus “Candidatus
Phytoplasma” is designated, on the basis of phylogeny, as a tentative
member in the family Acholeplasmataceae. Phylogenetic analysis based
on gene sequences, in particular, ribosomal sequences, has provided
the major supporting evidence for the composition and taxonomic
subdivision of this group of organisms with diverse habitats and ecology
and has become the mainstream for the Acholeplasmataceae systematics.
However, without the ability to determine phenotypic properties, the
circumscription of related species among the non culturable members of
the family remains a major issue.
The genus Acholeplasma comprises 14 species predominantly associated
with animals and isolated from mammalian fluids but regarded as not
normally pathogenic. Conversely, the genus “Ca. Phytoplasma” includes
plant pathogens of major economic relevance worldwide. To date, 36
“Ca. Phytoplasma species” have been described