Such an interesting plant with a strikingly beautiful flower, recognized as a sign of untidiness and neglect, found not so much  in barren ground but in good ground not  properly cared for.  The Thistle gets a bad rap as a plant of ill repute;  Shakespeare refers to the 'rough  Thistles' with 'hateful Docks', also  touted as part of the primeval  curse on the earth and on man in particular.   Another story that I like is that a  bare foot Viking attacker stepped  on one at night and cried out, so  alerting the defenders of a Scottish  castle.  Whatever the  justification, the national flower of Scotland  is the Thistle.  And  rightly so!  On the brighter side, I find them  beautiful, from a  distance, cows love chewing them, the young stems are  edible by humans   and the seeds yield a nice oil. Sort of a  more tropical version  of our desert's Prickly pear cactus.
   
 
  
  