<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
<h3>FLOWER LORE OF CHILDREN</h3>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0"><em>In childhood when with eager eyes</em><br/></span>
<span class="i4"><em>The season-measured years I view'd</em><br/></span>
<span class="i8"><em>All, garb'd in fairy guise</em><br/></span>
<span class="i12"><em>Pledg'd constancy of good.</em><br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0"><em>Spring sang of heaven; the summer flowers</em><br/></span>
<span class="i4"><em>Bade me gaze on, and did not fade;</em><br/></span>
<span class="i8"><em>Even suns o'er autumn's bowers</em><br/></span>
<span class="i12"><em>Heard my strong wish, and stay'd.</em><br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0"><em>They came and went, the short-lived four,</em><br/></span>
<span class="i4"><em>Yet, as their varying dance they wove,</em><br/></span>
<span class="i8"><em>To my young heart each bore</em><br/></span>
<span class="i16"><em>Its own sure claim of love.</em><br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i8">—<em>J. H. Card. Newman, 1874.</em><br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>The records of childish flower lore contained
in this chapter are those of my own childhood;
but they are equally the records of
the customs of colonial children, for these games
and rhymes and plays about flowers have been preserved
from generation to generation of New England
children. The transmission of this nature lore<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</SPAN></span>
has been as direct and unaltered in the new world
as in Great Britain. Some of these customs, such
as the eating of hollyhock cheeses and the blowing
of dandelion clocks, came originally, as have other
play usages, from England; many were varied in
early years by different conditions in the new world,
by local fitness and suggestion.</p>
<p>One chapter in Mr. Newell's book upon the
<cite>Games of American Children</cite> dwells upon the conservatism
of children. The unquestioning reception
of play formulas, which he proves, extended
to the flower rhymes and lore which I have recollected
and herein set down. These inherited
customs are far dearer to children than modern inventions.
There is a quaintness of expression, a
sentiment of tradition, that the child feels without
power of formulating.</p>
<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 400px;"><SPAN name="bellows" id="bellows"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src="images/i128.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="509" alt="Bellows" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center">Stella (Bradley) Bellows, 1800, <em>circa</em></p>
</div>
</div>
<p>If the paradise of the Orientals is a garden, so
was a garden of old-fashioned flowers the earthly
paradise for a child: the long sunny days brought
into life so many delightful playthings to be made
through the exercise of that keen instinct of all children,
destructiveness. Each year saw the fresh retelling
and teaching of child to child of happy flower
customs almost intuitively, or through the "knowledge
never learned at schools," that curious subtle
system of transmission which everywhere exists<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</SPAN></span>
among children who are blessed enough to spend
their summer days in the woods or in a garden.
The sober teachings of science in later years can
never make up the loss to those who have lived
their youth in great cities, and have grown up debarred
from this inheritance, knowing not when</p>
<p>"The summer comes with flower and bee."<br/></p>
<p>The dandelion was the earliest flower to stir the
children's memories; in New England it is "the
firstling of the year." In the days of my childhood
we did not wait for the buttercup to open to learn
whether we "loved butter"; the soft dimpled chin
of each child was held up, as had been those of other
children for past decades, to catch the yellow reflection
of the first dandelion on the pinky throat.</p>
<p>The dandelion had other charms for the child.
When the blooms had grown long-stemmed through
seeking the sun from under the dense box borders,
what pale green, opal-tinted curls could be made by
splitting the translucent stems and immersing them
in water, or by placing them in the mouth! I taste
still their bitterness! What grace these curls conferred
when fastened to our round combs, or hung
over our straight braids!—far better than locks of
corn silk. And what adorning necklaces and chains
like Indian wampum could be made by stringing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</SPAN></span>
"dandelion beads," formed by cutting the stems
into sections! This is an ancient usage; one
German name of the flower is chain-flower. The
making of dandelion curls is also an old-time
childish custom in Germany. When the dandelion
had lost her golden locks, and had grown
old and gray, the children still plucked the downy
heads, the "clocks" or blowballs, and holding aloft
these airy seed vessels, and fortifying the strong
young lungs with a deep breath, they blew upon
the head "to see whether my mother wants me,"
or to learn the time o' day.</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"Dandelion, the globe of down,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">The schoolboy's clock in every town,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Which the truant puffs amain<br/></span>
<span class="i1">To conjure back long hours again."<br/></span></div>
<p>The ox-eye daisy, the farmer's whiteweed, was
brought to New England, so tradition tells, as a
garden flower. Now, as Dr. Holmes says, it whitens
our fields to the great disgust of our liberal shepherds.
It soon followed the dandelion in bloom,
and a fresh necklace could be strung from the starry
blossoms, a daisy chain, just as English children
string their true pink and white daisies. This daisy
was also used as a medium of amatory divination,
by pulling from the floret the white ray flowers,
saying, "He loves me, he loves me not," or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</SPAN></span>
by repeating the old "apple-seed
rhyme":—</p>
<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 407px;"><SPAN name="daisy" id="daisy"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src="images/i129.jpg" width-obs="407" height-obs="600" alt="daisy chain" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center">Daisy chain</p>
</div>
</div>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"One I love,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Two I love,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Three I love, I say,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Four I love with all my heart,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Five I cast away," etc.<br/></span></div>
<p>Flower oracles are mediæval,
and divination by leaves of grass.
Children to-day, as of old, draw
grass stalks in the field and match
them to see who will be "It."
Walther von der Vogelweide
(1170-1230) did likewise:—</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"A spire of grass hath made me gay—<br/></span>
<span class="i1">I measured in the self-same way<br/></span>
<span class="i1">I have seen practised by a child.<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Come, look, and listen if she really does,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">She does, does not, she does, does not, she does."<br/></span></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The yellow disk, or "button," of the ox-eye
daisy, which was formed by stripping off the white
rays, made a pretty pumpkin pie for the dolls' table.
A very effective and bilious old lady, or "daisy
grandmother," was made by clipping off the rays to
shape the border or ruffle of a cap, leaving two long
rays for strings, and marking in a grotesque old
face with pen and ink. A dusky face, called with
childish plainness of speech a "nigger head," could
be made in like fashion from the "black-eyed
Susan" or "yellow daisy," which now rivals the
ox-eye daisy as a pest of New England fields.</p>
<p>Though the spring violets were dearly loved, we
slaughtered them ruthlessly by "fighting roosters"
with them. The projecting spur under the curved
stem at the base of the flower was a hook, and when
the violets "clinched" we pulled till the stronger
was conqueror, and the weaker head was off.</p>
<p>What braided "cat-ladders," and quaint, antique-shaped
boats with swelling lateen sail and pennant
of striped grass could be made from the flat, sword-like
leaves of the "flower-de-luce!" Filled with
flowers, these leafy boats could be set gayly adrift
down a tiny brook in the meadow, or, with equal
sentiment, in that delight of children since Froissart's
day, the purling gutter of a hillside street
after a heavy midsummer shower. The flowers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</SPAN></span>
chosen to sail in these tiny crafts were those most
human of all flowers, pansies, or their smaller
garden sisters, the "ladies'-delights" that turned
their laughing, happy faces to us from every nook
and corner of our garden. The folk names of this
flower, such as "three-faces-under-a-hood," "johnny-jump-up,"
"jump-up-and-kiss-me," "come-tickle-me,"
show the universal sense of its kinship to
humanity. I knew a child who insisted for years
that pansies spoke to her. Another child, who had
stolen a rose, and hidden it under her apron, called
out pettishly (throwing the rose in a pansy bed),
"Here! take your old flower"—as the pansy
faces blinked and nodded knowingly to her.</p>
<p>The "dielytra" (bleeding-heart, or lady's-eardrops
we called it) had long, gracefully drooping racemes
of bright red-pink flowers, which when pulled apart
and straightened out made fairy gondolas, or which
might be twisted into a harp and bottle. How
many scores have I carefully dissected, trying to
preserve intact in skeleton shape the little heart-shaped
"frame" of the delicate flower! The
bleeding-heart is a flower of inexplicable charm to
children; it has something of that mystery which
in human nature we term fascination. Little children
beg to pick it, and babies stretch out their tiny
hands to it when showier blossoms are unheeded.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>What black-headed puppets or dolls could be
made from the great poppies, whose reflexed petals
formed gay scarlet petticoats; and also from the
blossoms of vari-colored double balsams, with their
frills and flounces! The hollyhock, ever ready to
render to the child a new pleasure, could be tied into
tiny dolls with shining satin gowns, true fairies.
Families—nay, tribes of patriarchal size had the
little garden-mother. Mertensia, or lungwort, we
termed "pink and blue ladies." The lovely blossoms,
which so delighted the English naturalist
Wallace, and which he called "drooping porcelain-blue
bells," are shaped something like a child's
straight-waisted, full-skirted frock. If pins are stuck
upright in a piece of wood, the little blue silken
frocks can be hung over them, and the green calyx
looks like a tiny hat. A child friend forbidden to
play with dolls on the solemn New England Sabbath
was permitted to gather the mertensia bells on
that holy day, and also to use the cherished income
of a prosperous pin store. It was discovered with
maternal horror that she had carefully arranged her
pink and blue ladies in quadrilles and contra-dances,
and was very cheerfully playing dancing party, to
beguile the hours of a weary summer Sunday
afternoon.</p>
<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 350px;"><SPAN name="marbles" id="marbles"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src="images/i130.jpg" width-obs="350" height-obs="281" alt="marbles" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center">Playing Marbles</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Mr. Tylor, the author of <cite>Primitive Culture</cite>, call<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</SPAN></span>
our attention to the fact that many of the beloved
plays of children are only sportive imitations of the
serious business of life. In some cases the game
has outlived the serious practice of which it is a
copy—such as the use of bows and arrows. Children
love to produce these imitations themselves
with what materials they can obtain, not to have
them provided in finished perfection. Thus the
elaborately fitted-up doll's house and imitation grocery
store cannot keep the child contented for days
and weeks as can the doll's room or shop counter
furnished by the makeshifts of the garden. The
child makes her cups and saucers and furniture herself.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</SPAN></span>
She prepares her own powders and distillations
and is satisfied.</p>
<p>A harvest of acorn cups furnished table garniture,
but not a cherished one; they were too
substantial; we preferred more fragile, more perishable
wares. Rose-hips were fashioned into tiny
tea-sets, and would not be thought to be of great
durability. A few years ago I was present at the
opening of an ancient chest which had not been
thoroughly searched for many years. In a tiny
box within it was found some cherished belongings
of a little child who had died in the year
1794. Among them was one of these tea-sets made
of rose-hips, with handles of bent pins. Though
shrunken and withered, the rose-hips still possessed
some life color, but they soon fell into dust. There
was something most tender in the thought of that
loving mother, who had herself been dead over
half a century, who had thus preserved the childish
work of her beloved daughter.</p>
<p>Poppy pericarps made famous pepper-boxes, from
which the seed could be shaken as pepper; dishes
and cups, too, for dolls' tea-tables, and tiny handles
of strong grass stems could be attached to the cups.
For the child's larder, hollyhocks furnished food in
their mucilaginous cheeses, and the insipid akenes
of the sunflower and seeds of pumpkins swelled the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</SPAN></span>
feast. A daintier morsel, a drop of honey, the "clear
bee-wine" of Keats, could be sucked from the curved
spur of the columbine, and the scarlet-and-yellow
trumpet of the beautiful coral honeysuckle, mellifluous
of the name, as well as from the tubes of the
heads of clover. We ate rose-leaves, also, and grass
roots, and smarting peppergrass. The sorrel and
oxalis (which we called "ladies' sorrel") and the curling
tendrils of grape-vines gave an acid zest to our
childish nibblings and browsings.</p>
<p>The gnarled plum trees at the end of the garden
exuded beautiful crystals of gum, of which we could
say proudly, like Cornelia, "These are my jewels."
Translucent topaz and amber were never more
beautiful, and, void of settings, these pellucid gems
could be stuck directly on the fingers or on the tip
of the ear. And when our vanity was sated with the
bravery, or we could no longer resist our appetite,
there still remained another charm: with childish
opulence, like Cleopatra, we swallowed our jewels.</p>
<p>A low-growing mallow, wherever it chanced to
run, shared with its cousin hollyhock the duty of
providing cheeses. These mallow cheeses were also
eaten by English children. In allusion to this the
poet Clare wrote:—</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"The sitting down when school was o'er<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Upon the threshold of the door,<br/></span><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</SPAN></span>
<span class="i1">Picking from mallows, sport to please,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">The crumpled seed we call a cheese."<br/></span></div>
<p>These flower customs never came to us through
reading. All our English story-books told of making
cowslip balls, of breaking the shepherd's purse,
of playing lords and ladies with the arum—what
we call jack-in-the-pulpit; yet we never thought of
making any kindred attempts with these or similar
flowers. We did gather eagerly the jack-in-the-pulpit,
whose singularity of aspect seems always to
attract the attention of children, and by pinching it at
the base of the flower made it squeak, "made Jack
preach." But like true republicans we never called
our jacks lords and ladies.</p>
<p>The only liking we had for the portulaca was in
gathering the seeds which grew in little boxes with
a lid opening in a line around the middle. Oh,
dear! It doesn't seem like the same thing to hear
these beloved little seed-boxes described as "a pyxis,
or a capsule with a circumscissile dehiscence."</p>
<p>From the live-for-ever, or orpine (once tenderly
cherished as a garden favorite, now in many localities
a hated and persistent weed), we made frogs, or
purses, by gently pinching the fleshy leaves between
thumb and forefinger, thus loosening the
epidermis on the lower side of the leaf and making
a bladder which, when blown up, would burst with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</SPAN></span>
a delightful pop. The New England folk-names
by which this plant is called, such as frog-plant,
blow-leaf, pudding-bag plant, show the wide-spread
prevalence of this custom. A rival in sound
could be made by popping the foxglove's fingers.
English countrywomen call the foxglove a pop.
The morning-glory could also be blown up and
popped, and the canterbury-bell. We placed rose
petals and certain tender leaves over our lips, and
drew in the centres for explosion.</p>
<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 450px;"><SPAN name="spanish" id="spanish"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src="images/i131.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="258" alt="Spanish" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center">Spanish Dolls</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Noisy boys found scores of other ways to make
various resounding notes in the gardens. A louder
pop could be made by placing broad leaves on the
extended thumb and forefinger of one hand and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</SPAN></span>
striking them with the other. The boys also made
squawks out of birch bark and fiddles of cornstalks
and trombones from the striped prickly leaf-stalks
of pumpkins and squashes.</p>
<p>The New England chronicler in rhyme of boyhood
days, Rev. John Pierpont, called this sound
evoked from the last-named instrument "the deeper
tone that murmurs from the pumpkin leaf trombone."
It is, instead, a harsh trumpeting. These
trombones were made in Germany as early as the
thirteenth century.</p>
<p>An ear-piercing whistle could be constructed from
a willow branch, and a particularly disagreeable
sound could be evoked by every boy, and (I must
acknowledge it) by every girl, too, by placing broad
leaves of grass—preferably the pretty striped ribbon-grass,
or gardener's garters—between the thumbs
and blowing thereon. Other skilful and girl-envied
accomplishments of the boys I will simply name:
making baskets and brooches by cutting or filing
the furrowed butternut or the stone of a peach;
also fairy baskets, Japanesque in workmanship, of
cherry stones; manufacturing old-women dolls of
hickory nuts; squirt-guns and pop-guns of elderberry
stems; pipes of horse-chestnuts, corn-cobs, or
acorns, in which dried sweet-fern could be smoked;
sweet-fern or grape-stem or corn-silk cigars.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Some child customs successfully defy the law of
the survival of the useful, and ignore the lesson of
reason; they simply exist. A marked example
of these, of bootless toil, is the laborious hoarding
of horse-chestnuts each autumn. With what eagerness
and hard work do boys gather these pretty
nuts; how they quarrel with one another over the
possession of every one; how stingily they dole out
a few to the girls who cannot climb the trees, and
are not permitted to belabor the branches with
clubs and stones for dislodgment of the treasures,
as do their lordly brothers! How carefully the
gathered store is laid away for winter, and not one
thing ever done with one horse-chestnut, until all
feed a grand blaze in the open fireplace! At the
time of their gathering they are converted to certain
uses, are made into certain toys. They are tied to
the ends of strings, and two boys, holding the
stringed chestnuts, play cob-nut. Two nuts are
also tied together by a yard of cord, and, by a
catching knack, circled in opposite directions. But
these games have a very emphatic time and season,—the
weeks when the horse-chestnuts ripen. The
winter's store is always untouched.</p>
<p>From a stray burdock plant which had escaped
destruction in our kitchen garden, or from a group
of these pestilent weeds in a neighboring by-path,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</SPAN></span>
could be gathered materials for many days of
pleasure. The small, tenacious burs could be easily
wrought into interesting shapes. There was a
romance in our neighborhood about a bur-basket.
A young man conveyed a written proposal of marriage
to his sweetheart reposing in one of the spiny
vehicles. Like the Ahkoond of Swat, I don't know
"why or which or when or what" he chose such an
extraordinary medium, but the bur-basket was forever
after haloed with sentiment. We made from
burs more prosaic but admirable furniture for the
dolls' house,—tables, chairs, and cradles: Traces
of the upholstery clung long and disfiguringly to
our clothing, but never deterred us from the fascinating
occupation. To throw these burs upon
each other's clothing was held to be the commission
of the unpardonable sin in childish morals; still it
was done "in holiday foolery," as in Shakespeare's
day.</p>
<p>The milkweed, one of our few native weeds, and
a determined settler on its native soil, furnished
abundant playthings. The empty pods became
fairy cradles, and tiny pillows could be made of the
beautiful silk. The milkweed and thistle both furnish
pretty, silvery balls when treated with deft
fingers; and their manufacture is no modern fashion.
Manasseh Cutler, writing in 1786, says:—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</SPAN></span></p>
<blockquote>
<p>"I was pleased with a number of perfectly white silken
balls, as they appeared to be, suspended by small threads
along the frame of the looking-glass. They were made
by taking off the calyx of the thistle at an early stage of
blooming."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Ingenious toys of amusing shapes could be
formed of the pith of the milkweed, and when
weighted with a tack would always fall tack downward,
as did the grotesque corn-stalk witches.</p>
<p>Pressed flowers were devoted to special uses. I
cannot recall pressing any flower save larkspur,—the
"lark-heels" of Shakespeare. Why this flower
was chosen I do not know, unless for the reason
that its colors were so enduring. We used to make
charming wreaths of the stemless flowers by placing
the spur of one in the centre of another flower, and
thus forming a tiny circle. A favorite arrangement
was alternating the colors pink and blue. These
stiff little pressed wreaths were gummed on a sheet
of paper, to be used at the proper time as a valentine,—were
made for that definite purpose; yet I
cannot now recall that, when February came, I ever
sent one of these valentines, or indeed had any to
send.</p>
<p>I have found these larkspur wreaths in a Pike's
Arithmetic, used a century ago, and also in old
Bibles, sometimes fastened in festoons on the title-page,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</SPAN></span>
around the name of a past owner. Did Dr.
Holmes refer to one when he wrote his graceful
line, "light as a loop of larkspur"? A similar
wreath could be made of the columbine spurs. A
friend tells me she made scores in her youth; but
we never pressed any flowers but larkspur.</p>
<p>Many pretty wreaths were made of freshly gathered
flowers. The daintiest were of lilac or phlox
petals, which clung firmly together without being
threaded, and the alternation of color in these
wreaths—one white and two purple lilac petals,
or two white phlox petals and two crimson—could
easily prove the ingenuity and originality of the
child who produced them. In default of better-loved
flowers, the four-o'clock, or marvel-of-Peru,
was made into a similar garland.</p>
<p>In the beautiful and cleanly needles of the pine
the children had an unlimited supply for the manufacture
of toys. Pretty necklaces could be made for
personal adornment, resembling in miniature the
fringed bark garments of the South Sea Islanders,
and tiny brooms for dolls' houses. A thickly growing
cluster of needles was called "a lady." When
her petticoats were carefully trimmed, she could be
placed upright on a sheet of paper, and by softly
blowing upon it could be made to dance. A winter's
amusement was furnished by gathering and storing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</SPAN></span>
the pitch-pine cones and hearing them snap open
in the house. The cones could also be planted
with grass-seeds, and form a cheerful green growing
ornament.</p>
<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 450px;"><SPAN name="leaf" id="leaf"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src="images/i132.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="397" alt="boats" />
<div class="caption"><p>Leaf Boats made from Flower-de-luce</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>From birch bark gathered in long wood walks
could be made cornucopias and drinking-cups, and
letters could be cut thereon and thereof. There
wandered through the town, harmless and happy,
one of "God's fools," whose like is seen in every<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</SPAN></span>
country community. He found his pleasure in
early autumn in strolling through the country, and
marking with his jack-knife, in cabalistic designs,
the surface of all the unripe pumpkins and squashes.
He was driven by the farmers from this annoying
trespass in the daytime, but "by brave moonshine"
could still make his mysterious mark on the harvest
of the year. The boys of the town, impressed by
the sight of a garden or field of squashes thus curiously
marked, fell into a habit of similar inscription,
which in them became wanton vandalism, and had
none of the sense of baffled mystery which always
hung around and illumined poor Elmer's letters. A
favorite manner of using the autumn store of pumpkins
was in the manufacture of Jack-o'-lanterns,
which were most effective and hideous when lighted
from within.</p>
<p>"The umbrellas are out!" call country children
in spring, when the peltate leaves of the May apple
spread their umbrella-shaped lobes, and the little
girls gather them, and the leaves of the wild sarsaparilla,
for dolls' parasols. The spreading head of
what we called snake grass could also be tied into
a very effective miniature parasol. There is no
sense of caste among children when in a field or
garden—all are equally well dressed when "bedizened
and brocaded" with garden finery. Green<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</SPAN></span>
leaves can be pinned with their stems into fantastic
caps and bonnets; foxglove fingers can be used as
gloves; the blossoms of the jewelweed make pretty
earrings; and the dandelion and daisy chains are not
the only necklaces,—the lilac and larkspur chains
and pretty little circlets of phlox are proudly worn;
and strings of rose-hips end the summer. The old
English herbalist says "children with delight make
chains and pretty gewgaws of the fruit of roses."
Truly, the garden-bred child walks in gay attire
from May to October.</p>
<p>The "satten" found by the traveller Josselyn, in
seventeenth-century New England gardens, formed
throughout New England a universal plaything, and
a frequent winter posy, in country parlors, on mantel
or table. The broad white oval partition, of satiny
lustre, remaining after the side valves had fallen,
made juvenile money, and the plant went by the
appropriate name of money-in-both-pockets.</p>
<p>Other seeds were gathered as the children's spoils:
those of the garden balsam, to see them burst, or to
feel them curl up in the hand like living creatures;
those of the balsam's cousin, the jewelweed, to watch
them snap violently open—hence its country
name of touch-me-not and snapweed. When the
leaves were hung with dew it deserved its title
of jewelweed, and when they were immersed in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</SPAN></span>
water its other pretty descriptive folk name of
silver-leaf.</p>
<p>A grotesquery could be formed from the seed-pods
in the centre of the peony, when opened, in
such a way that the tiny pink and white seeds resembled
two sets of teeth in an open mouth. Imaginary
miniature likenesses were found in the various
parts of many flowers: the naked pistil and stamens
of one were a pair of tongs; another had a seed
ovary which was a lady, a very stout lady with extending
hoops. The heart's-ease had in its centre
an old lady washing her feet; the monk's-hood, a
devil in his chariot. A single petal of the columbine,
with attached sepals, was a hovering dove, and
the whole flower—Izaak Walton's "culverkeys"—formed
a little dish with a ring of pigeon-heads
bending within.</p>
<p>There were many primitive inks and staining
juices that could be expressed, and milks and gums
that exuded, from various plants. We painted
pictures in our books with the sap from the petals
of the red peonies, and blue juice from the blossom
of the spiderwort, or tradescantia, now a neglected
flower. We dyed dolls' clothes with the juice
of elderberries. The country child could also dye
a vivid red with the juice of the pokeberry, the
"red-ink" plant, or with the stems of the bloodroot;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</SPAN></span>
and the sap crushed from soft, pulpy leaves,
such as those of the live-for-ever, furnished a green
stain.</p>
<p>There was a certain garden lore connected with
insects, not so extensive, probably, as a child would
have upon a farm. We said to the snail:—</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"Snail, snail, come out of your hole,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Or else I will beat you as black as a coal."<br/></span></div>
<p>We sang to the lady-bug:—</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"Lady-bug, lady-bug, fly away home;<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Your house is on fire, your children will burn."<br/></span></div>
<p>We caught the grasshoppers, and thus exhorted
them:—</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"Grandfather, grandfather gray,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Give me molasses, or I'll throw you away."<br/></span></div>
<p>We believed that earwigs lived for the sole purpose
of penetrating our ears, that dragon-flies flew with
the sole thought of sewing up our lips—devil's
darning-needles we called them. To this day I
instinctively cover my mouth at their approach.
We used to entrap bumble-bees in the bells of
monopetalous flowers such as canterbury-bells, or
in the ample folds of the hollyhock, and listen to
their indignant scolding and buzzing, and watch
them gnaw and push out to freedom. I cannot
recall ever being stung in the process.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>We had the artistic diversion of "pin-a-sights."
These were one of the shop-furnishings of pin
stores, whose curious lore, and the oddly shaped
and named articles made for them, should be recorded
ere they are forgotten. A "pin-a-sight"
was made of a piece of glass, on which were stuck
flowers in various designs. Over these flowers was
pasted a covering of paper, in which a movable flap
could be lifted, to display, on payment of a pin, the
concealed treasures. We used to chant, to entice
sight-seers, "A pin, a pin, a poppy-show." This
being our rendering of the word "puppet-show."
I recall as our "sights" chiefly the tiny larkspur
wreaths before named, and miniature trees carefully
manufactured of grass-spires. A noted "pin-a-sight,"
glorious still in childish history and tradition,
was made for my pin-store by a grown-up girl of
fourteen. She cut in twain tiny baskets, which she
pasted on glass, and filled with wonderful artificial
flowers manufactured out of the petals of real blossoms.
I well remember her "gilding refined gold"
by making a gorgeous blue rose out of the petals of
a flower-de-luce.</p>
<p>I cannot recall playing much with roses; we fashioned
a bird out of the buds. The old English
rhyme describing the variation of the sepals was
unknown to us:—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"On a summer's day in sultry weather<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Five brethren were born together:<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Two had beards, and two had none,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">And the other had but half a one."<br/></span></div>
<p>Still, with the rose is connected one of my most
tender child memories,—somewhat of a gastronomic
cast, yet suffused with an element of grace,—the
making of "rosy-cakes." These dainty fairy cakes
were made of layers of rose-leaves sprinkled with
powdered sugar and cinnamon, and then carefully
enfolded in slips of white paper. Sometimes they
were placed in the garden over night, pressed between
two flat stones. As a morsel for the epicure
they were not altogether alluring, although inoffensive,
but decidedly preferable to pumpkin or sunflower
seeds, and they were englamoured with
sentiment; for these rosy-cakes were not destined
to be greedily eaten by the concocter, but were to
be given with much secrecy as a mark of affection,
a true love token, to another child or some beloved
older person, and were to be eaten also in secret.
I recall to this day the thrill of happiness which the
gift of one of these little paper-inclosed rosy-cakes
brought to me, in the days of my childhood, when
it was slipped into my hand by a beautiful and gentle
child, who died the following evening, during a
thunder-storm, of fright. The tragedy of her death,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</SPAN></span>
the memory of the startling glimpses given by the
vivid lightning, of agitated running to and fro in the
heavy rain and lowering darkness, and the terrified
summons of kindly neighbors,—all have fixed more
firmly in my mind the happy recollection of her
last gift.</p>
<p>Another custom of my youth was watching at
dusk the opening of the twisted buds of the garden
primrose into wan, yellow stars, "pallid flowers, by
dew and moonlight fed," which filled the early evening
with a faint, ineffable fragrance that drew a host
of encircling night moths. Keats said they "leaped
from buds into ripe flowers," a habit thus told by
Margaret Deland:—</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"Here, in warm darkness of a night in June,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">* * * * * children came<br/></span>
<span class="i1">To watch the primrose blow.<br/></span>
<span class="i24">Silent they stood,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Hand clasped in hand, in breathless hush around,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">And saw her shyly doff her soft green hood<br/></span>
<span class="i1">And blossom—with a silken burst of sound!"<br/></span></div>
<p>In our home garden stood a clump of tall primroses,
whose beautiful flowers, when opened, were
four inches in diameter. When riding, one summer
evening, along a seaside road on Cape Ann,
we first saw one of these queens of the night in an
humble dooryard. In the dark its seeds were gathered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</SPAN></span>
and given by an unknown hand and a flower-loving
heart to my mother, to form under her "fair
tendance" the luminous evening glory of her garden.
And on summer nights this stately primrose still
blooms in moonlight and starlight, though the gentle
hand that planted it is no longer there:—</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"Yon rising Moon that looks for us again<br/></span>
<span class="i1">How oft hereafter will she wax and wane<br/></span>
<span class="i3">How oft hereafter look for us<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Through this same Garden—and for <em>one</em> in vain."<br/></span></div>
<p>To every garden-bred child the sudden blossoming
and pale shining in the gloaming have ever given
the evening primrose a special tender interest,—a
faintly mystic charm through the chill of falling dew
and the dim light, and through a half-sad atmosphere
which has always encircled the flower, and has been
felt by many of the poets, making them seldom sing
the evening primrose as a flower of happiness.
With the good night of children
to the flowers, I close this
record of old-time
child life.</p>
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