<h2 id="c10">A PLANT THAT MELTS ICE.</h2>
<p>To say that a plant can melt ice is to
assert a miracle seemingly too great for
even Nature’s powers to compass, but a
traveler lately returned from the Alps
has witnessed this wonderful phenomenon,
while Grant Allen and other authorities
confirm the fact that the Alpine Soldanella
melts for its blossom a passage
through the ice by power of its own internal
heat.</p>
<p>The majority of tourists visit the Alps
in August; therefore they miss a rare
sight, that of a daring little shrub opening
its fringed blue buds in the very middle
of the snow sheet, and often showing
its slender head above a layer of ice,
in the most incredible fashion.</p>
<p>We may regard the Alps as unpeopled
solitudes, but to Alpine plants they are a
veritable world of competing life types.</p>
<p>Those only fitted for the struggle survive.</p>
<p>The botanists tell us that the Soldanella
is heavily handicapped in the race. In
the first place, it is obliged to eke out a
livelihood in the mountain belt just below
the snow line; further, it is a very
low growing variety, and is quickly obscured
and overtopped by the dense and
rapid growth of its taller rivals; hence its
anxiety to seize its one chance in life at
the earliest possible moment.</p>
<p>To attain the end of its being, the perpetuation
of its species, it must steal a
march upon its companions, as it were,
and show itself while they are still locked
in sleep, and when its insect fertilizers,
fresh from their cocoons, can see and
visit it.</p>
<p>To accomplish its purpose it has made
ample preparations.</p>
<p>All through the previous summer its
round leaves, admirably fitted to their
purpose, have been spread to the mountain
sun and gathered in the fuel to be
burned later on.</p>
<p>When winter arrives the leaves had
grown thick in rich material and so leathery
that no amount of snow could injure
them.</p>
<p>The first warmth of spring melting
the edges of the snow sheet sends the
moisture trickling down to the Soldanella’s
roots. This, acting upon them as
water upon malting barley, brings about
germination.</p>
<p>The plant, absorbing the oxygen in the
air under the ice and combining it with
the fuel in its own substance, melts its
way into the open air. A fragile flower
forcing its way through a solid crust of
ice. Literally, not metaphorically, a slow
combustion store.</p>
<p>This novel feat is accomplished every
season, yet comparatively few observers
note it.</p>
<p><span class="lr"><span class="sc">Louise Jamison.</span></span></p>
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