Ranunculus to You: Lobelia to Millet

LOBELIA   “Malevolence”             I am told this can be poisonous if taken in large quantities.  I do not wish to know who ate enough Lobelia to find that out.  Our ancestors also called this Gagroot and Vomitroot, so apparently a lot of people tried it. LOCUST   “Affection Beyond the Grave” LOCUST, HONEY   “Sweetness” LONDON-PRIDE   “Frivolity”Continue reading “Ranunculus to You: Lobelia to Millet”

Ranunculus to You: Larkspur to Liverwort

                                                            L LARKSPUR   “Pensive Beauty” Lad’s Love:   see SOUTHERNWOOD LADY’S MANTLE   “Fashion”             Plantlorists tend to make any reference to a lady in a flower name symbolic of the Virgin Mary.  Floriographers seem not to have seen it that way. LADY’S SLIPPER   “Capricious beauty” *LADY’S TRESSES   “Bewitching Grace” LAGERSTRAEMIA   “Eloquence”             This is sometimes calledContinue reading “Ranunculus to You: Larkspur to Liverwort”

Ranunculus to You: Hackmetack to Hyssop

                                                                        H HACKMETACK   “Single Blessedness”             This is a kind of tamarack, and is sometimes spelled tacmehac.  No, honest! HAND FLOWER TREE   “Warning” HARBELL   “Grief” *HARLEQUIN   “Laugh at Trouble”HAWK WEED   “Quicksightedness”             It was believed, once upon a time, that hawks rubbed their eyes with this to give them, well, eyes like a hawk.  IContinue reading “Ranunculus to You: Hackmetack to Hyssop”

Ranunculus to You, Gardenia to Grass

G GARDENIA   “Transport of Joy”             Sheer ecstasy is what they mean.  The gardenia appears more often in flower language books as Cape Jasmine.  See also JASMINE, CAPE. *GARLAND   “Love’s Bondage”             “Love for a garden has powerful influence in attracting men to their homes, and on this account, every encouragement given to increase aContinue reading “Ranunculus to You, Gardenia to Grass”

Ranunculus to You: Fair Maids to Furze

F FAIR MAIDS OF FRANCE   “Lustre” FENNEL   “Strength”*             This was a wreath awarded at games in ancient days, generally for great strength.  Gladiators ate it to give them strength and courage in the ring.  And the Battle of Marathon was supposed to have been fought in a field of fennel.  But its meaning couldContinue reading “Ranunculus to You: Fair Maids to Furze”

Ranunculus to You: Daffodil to Eyebright

                                                                        D DAFFODIL   “Regard”             The pioneer floriographers could not agree on whether the Daffodil meant Chivalry, Uncertainty, or Mistaken Hope.  In 1867, the Lover of Flowers declared it stood for Regard, and that meaning has prevailed ever since. DAHLIA   “Instability”             Tradition tells us the Dahlia came from mainland Europe to England twice.  TheContinue reading “Ranunculus to You: Daffodil to Eyebright”

Ranunculus to You: Coriander Through Cypress

CORIANDER   “Concealed Merit”*             Henry Phillips says this comes from the use of coriander as an anti-colic drug given to women and children disguised in a bonbon.  The men took it straight, I guess.             Anyway, most all the pioneers agree on this meaning: Mme. De Latour, Robert Tyas, Lucy Hooper, and Frances S. Osgood. Continue reading “Ranunculus to You: Coriander Through Cypress”

Ranunculus to You, Carrot to Coreopsis

CARROT   “Good Character”             As Dennis the Menace will not tell you, eating all your cooked carrots builds good character.             Animals, birds, and insects seem to get all the really good superhero names; even weather conditions and abstract qualities seem to be preferred.  There was Captain Carrot (a superhero rabbit) and The Black Orchid,Continue reading “Ranunculus to You, Carrot to Coreopsis”

Ranunculus to You, Browallia to Carnation

BROWALLIA JAMISONII   “Could You Bear Want?”             This shrub is now officially Steptosolen jamisonii. BRYONY   “Prosperity” BRYONY, BLACK   “Be My Support”             This is a climbing plant without tendrils, so it cannot climb without some kind of support.  And why did Nature provide us with a climbing plant that can’t climb? BUCKBEAN   “Calm repose”*            Continue reading “Ranunculus to You, Browallia to Carnation”

Ranunculus to You, Bilberry to Broom

BILBERRY   “Treachery”             This is also the whortleberry, and was originally a chap named Myrtillus.  Pelops was racing his chariot against that of Myrtillus’s master, and bribed Myrtillus to sabotage the man’s chariot.  Pelops, on winning the race, killed Myrtillus for betraying his master.  Pelops was a man of principle, see.  Myrtillus, as a sonContinue reading “Ranunculus to You, Bilberry to Broom”