See also Caragana, Rose acacia (R. hispida), and Yellow acacia (Vachellia).
â Black locust
Robinia pseudoacacia L. (1753). WFO
Cherokee / TsalagiTsalagi Gawonihisd, áŁáłá© áŠáŹááŻáá: á§á¶áá (káșĄlogwehdi) (Raven Rock Dictionary, King (2015)); galiwĂąâdÇ (L. Cannady (2023) - see notes).
Period English: acacia; ▲︎ Arkansa locust; TTA ▲︎ common locust tree; EWW ▲︎ locust; O&B CHW LH ▲︎ pseudo acacia; EWW ▲︎ white acacia. EWW
Period French: acacia m.; BD acacia des jardins m. ('garden acacia'); JDS
Period German: Akazie f.; JRV AkazienblĂŒthe f. ('acacia blossom'); JRV Akazien-Schotendorn f. JDS
Sentiments:
🏶︎ MystĂšreMystery ◼︎ (1811); BD
🏶︎ ❗︎ Amour platoniquePlatonic love ◼︎ (1819-c.1825); CLT LA-M
❗︎ Chaste love ▲︎◆︎ (1825-1850); HP:FE TTA FSO LH S&K HGA:OT
❗︎ Friendship ▲︎◆︎ (1839-1884); FS GAL CMK KG
❗︎ Platonic love ▲︎◆︎ (1840-1869); CHW FSO HGA:LOF RT:LPF
🏶︎ Elegance ▲︎ (1832-1840); EWW TM
See also Rose acacia.
🏶︎ Beauty in retirement ▲︎ (1834); O&B
🏶︎ Komm an mein Herz.Come to my heart. ●︎ ïž(c.1880). JRV
Blossom specifically:
🏶︎ Wann Ćżehe ich dich wieder?When will I see you again? ●︎ ïž(c.1880). JRV
Sprig of leaves:
🏶︎ ❗︎ I offer you my friendship ▲︎ (1884). CMK
Region:
Native: North-Central, Northeastern and Southeastern USA. Its exact native range is unknown, but appears centred around the Appalachian Mountains and the Ozark Pleateau and Ouachita Mountains.WFO
Introduced: Throughout temperate regions worldwide, including: Macaronesia; Northern Africa; Southern Africa; RĂ©union; Caucasus; China; Japan; Korea; Taiwan; Middle and Western Asia; Russia; the Indian Subcontinent; Aotearoa; broadly across Europe excluding Scandinavia and Ireland; broadly across Northern and Central America; Easter Island; Argentina Northeast; and Chile Central.WFO
Seasonality: Flowers late spring.
... in the months of May and June, it is laden with bunches of white sweet-scented flowers [...] The branches are liable to be shivered off by autumnal storms. EWW
Period Colours:
... in the months of May and June, it is laden with bunches of white sweet-scented flowers, resembling those of the laburnum in size and position. The foliage is of a beautiful light green, consisting of many elliptical, opposite or alternate, stalked leaflets. EWW
White with faintest crimson flush ... HGA:OT
Cited Verse:
⧠'Eighteen Hundred and Eleven: A Poem', ◆︎ Anna Laetitia Barbauld (1812), as found in The works of Anna Laetitia Barbauld vol. 1 (1825) pp.248-249; HP:FE
⧠'The Light of the Haram', ◆︎ (Irish) Thomas Moore, Lalla Rookh, An Oriental Romance (1817) pp.331-332 Read Here. CHW
However, given Lalla Rookh's setting in Mughal East Asia, this is better associated with Vachellia.