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There's no specific flower that represents homosexuality, but there are a few plant references:

  • American poet Walt Whitman used the calamus plant to represent homoerotic love.
  • In ancient Rome, as well as in 19th-century England, green indicated homosexual affiliations. Victorian men would often pin a green carnation on their lapel as popularized by author Oscar Wilde, who often wore one on his lapel.
  • Lesbians used to give violets to the woman they were wooing, symbolizing their "Sapphic" desire. In a poem, Sappho described herself and a lover wearing garlands of violets. The giving of violets was popular from the 1910s to the 1950s.




There's no specific flower that represents homosexuality, but there are a few plant references:

  • American poet Walt Whitman used the calamus plant to represent homoerotic love.
  • In ancient Rome, as well as in 19th-century England, green indicated homosexual affiliations. Victorian men would often pin a green carnation on their lapel as popularized by author Oscar Wilde, who often wore one on his lapel.
  • Lesbians used to give violets to the woman they were wooing, symbolizing their "Sapphic" desire. In a poem, Sappho described herself and a lover wearing garlands of violets. The giving of violets was popular from the 1910s to the 1950s.
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10y ago

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