Around the circle are half ovals set like the petals of a daisy.
The other two items on each sheet were chosen from among a rabbit, a cat, an apple, a bird, and a daisy.
He would always arrive fresh as a daisy from the other side of the world, his stamina shaming younger colleagues who had travelled far shorter distances.
The speaker asks the "slight" daisy, "thou little veil for so great a mystery," when she, the poet, might "penetrate all things and thee" (1, 6, 7).
Furthermore, texting and indeed phone conversation is just as much a technology, a skill, recourse for poetry and love, as is a daisy or a mountain.
The 'flour' in this case, which is characterised as both a beautiful hollyhock (passerose) and a daisy (marguerite) whiter than any swan, seems to refer to the bride.
Daisy thinks she can manage.
Rather than being driven by an outbreak of daisy-cutters, we need an outbreak of diplomacy.