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Literary notes about amaranth (AI summary)

In literature the color amaranth often serves as a vivid, evocative marker—one that brings to mind both intense passion and an otherworldly beauty. Writers have employed this hue to convey shifting moods and landscapes: for instance, [1] describes mountain tops gleaming in running colors of amaranth, green, and mottled gold, crafting a scene that feels both natural and surreal. In more technical reflections on hue, [2] outlines how certain chemical treatments produce an amaranth tint, emphasizing the distinctive saturation of this color. Poetic language also embraces the richness of amaranth, as seen in [3] where “blood crimson, shaded amaranth” suggests a blending of life’s vibrancy with its deeper, somber undertones, and in [4] where a “crown of amaranth” symbolizes enduring splendor that does not fade.
  1. There the mountain tops, perpetually covered with ice and snow, gleamed through the clouds with running colors of amaranth, green and mottled gold.
    — from The Eternal Maiden by T. Everett (Thomas Everett) Harré
  2. Excess of acetate of alumina turns it on the AMARANTH TINT ; the acetate of iron darkens it.
    — from Cooley's Cyclopædia of Practical Receipts and Collateral Information in the Arts, Manufactures, Professions, and Trades..., Sixth Edition, Volume I by Richard Vine Tuson
  3. Blood crimson, shaded amaranth.
    — from Roses and Rose Growing by Rose Georgina Kingsley
  4. Perchance on board are riches, To cheer the minstrel’s lot, And glory’s crown of amaranth, Whose purple fadeth not.
    — from Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXX, No. 2, February 1847 by Various

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