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  • June 1, 1878
  • Page 16
  • THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS.
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1878: Page 16

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    Article THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. ← Page 4 of 7 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

growing usually in moist situations , are poisonous ; to this rule , though , there is one notable exception , the Angelica , Avhich is used as the basis of a SAveetmeat . Referring to the poisonous properties of the Hemlock , Ave cannot forget the philosopher Socrates , who was compelled to drink its deadly juice , nor shall we hardly fail to call to mind the curious , if original , views of the goodness of Providence held by Pliny when he asks" Wherefore hath our Mother Earth brought out poisons in so great a quantity but that

men in distress might make away with themselves 1 " Far differently shall Ave regard the Creator ' s Avays Avhen AA'e dAvell upon the sendee that even deadly plants such as Hemlock and Foxglove , rightly understood and properly applied , render to suffering humanitylengthening not shortening , making happy not cutting off as unendurable , the term of human life ; many a quondam nervous sufferer has reason to be grateful to these plants for the relief they have afforded him . Injudiciously appliedespecially amongst the

, " simples" of villagers of the " "Wise" sort , such plants have wrought much mischief , AA'hich fact seems to have been IOIOAVU to Gerarde , AA'ho says common Marjoram given in Avine is a remedy not only against the " bitings ancl stingings of venomous beasts , " but it also " cureth them that have drunk opium or the juice of black poppy or hemlocks , especially if it be given AA'ith AA'ine ancl raisons of the sun . "

The Foxglove , Avith its lofty steins , handsome leaves , ancl beautiful bells of AA'hite , pink , red , or purple , deserves a separate mention beyond that of its being of such great medicinal A'alue . It is one of the handsomest native floAA'ers Ave have , and there is , perhaps , no move beautiful sight than one of the lanes in tho Yorkshire dales , with its banks Avaving shoulder-high Avith a luxuriant gi'OAvth of Bracken , Male-fern , and Foxglove . Another of the Fig Worts is the Knotted , which frequents woods and moist

grounds ; it may be knoAvn by its tall square stem , notched leaves , heart-shaped at the base ancl tapering to a point , and comparatively insignificant cluster of dingy greenish purple blossoms . This species is named from its knotted root . There is another kind , equally common , which frequents streams , ancl is known as the Water Fig Wort or Water Betony . It may he recognized by a small winged expansion of the angles of its square stem . The odour is disagreeable like that of the Elder . Both species are unwholesomeand disliked

, by cattle , but that they can be eaten Avas proA'ed at the siege of Rochelle by Cardinal Richlieu hi 1628 , when their roots formed the main support of the starving soldiers . The French to this day call the Fig Wort Ilerbe du Siege . Notwithstanding then disagreable odour , the floAvers are attractive to many insects , notably wasps ! There are two other species , the Balm-leaved and the YelloAV , but they are not so common .

Another handsome plant , although hardly , perhaps , a strictly indigenous one is the common Snapdragon that affects the toj ) s of old ancl crumbling Avails . Another variety of this latter jdant is the slender creeping-stemmed Ivy-leaved Snapdragon . The next type of floiver that Ave must notice is the large pea-blossomed or podbearing famdy , for Ave can hardly proceed a yard Avithout treacling upon one or other of them ; here , as Ave speak , at our feet is one member of the tribe—nay , Ave ought to haA'e said branch of the tribefor it is quite a numerous companyAve mean the

Clover—, , Clover Dutch , Clover White , Clover Eed , Trefoil Purple , Trefoil Yellow , Middle , with its zigzag stems and purple blossoms—all unmistakably pea-like or podded , save that instead of the pods hanging upon single stems they are gathered into bunches . In common with all other trefoiled plants—Shamrocks and the like—the Clovers were considered by our ancestors to be antagonistic to evd and " noisome " to AA'andering Avitch or wary AA'izard . The poet alludes to this old notion : —

"Woe , Avoe to the knight Avho meets the green knight , Except on his faulchiou arm , Spell-proof he bear , like the brave St . Clair , The holy Trefoil ' s charm . No doubt the tri-une leaf had to do Avith the foundation of the belief , linking it with the legend of St , Patrick ' s taking , when introducing Christianity into Ireland , as the text of his sermon on the Divine Trinit y in Hnity , the triple leaf of the Shamrock which sprang up from the hole made in the turf by the point of his pastoral staff ,

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-06-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061878/page/16/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 2
PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 5
"KICK HIM DOWN." Article 10
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 11
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 13
T. CH. BARON ZEDLITZ. Article 20
THE PAST. Article 20
THE PRESENT. Article 20
THE FUTURE. Article 21
STANZAS. Article 21
UNCERTAIN LIGHT. Article 21
A LOOK TOWARDS HEAVEN. Article 22
AMABEL VAUGHAN. Article 23
WOMEN'S RIGHTS AND WOMEN'S WORK. Article 27
ON SELECTING THE BEST CHARITY. Article 28
LOVE AND MASONRY. Article 31
Review. Article 35
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 39
LOST AND SAVED ; OR NELLIE POWERS THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 42
ON THE TESTING AND STRENGTH OF RAILWAY MATERIALS, &c. Article 44
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 46
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

growing usually in moist situations , are poisonous ; to this rule , though , there is one notable exception , the Angelica , Avhich is used as the basis of a SAveetmeat . Referring to the poisonous properties of the Hemlock , Ave cannot forget the philosopher Socrates , who was compelled to drink its deadly juice , nor shall we hardly fail to call to mind the curious , if original , views of the goodness of Providence held by Pliny when he asks" Wherefore hath our Mother Earth brought out poisons in so great a quantity but that

men in distress might make away with themselves 1 " Far differently shall Ave regard the Creator ' s Avays Avhen AA'e dAvell upon the sendee that even deadly plants such as Hemlock and Foxglove , rightly understood and properly applied , render to suffering humanitylengthening not shortening , making happy not cutting off as unendurable , the term of human life ; many a quondam nervous sufferer has reason to be grateful to these plants for the relief they have afforded him . Injudiciously appliedespecially amongst the

, " simples" of villagers of the " "Wise" sort , such plants have wrought much mischief , AA'hich fact seems to have been IOIOAVU to Gerarde , AA'ho says common Marjoram given in Avine is a remedy not only against the " bitings ancl stingings of venomous beasts , " but it also " cureth them that have drunk opium or the juice of black poppy or hemlocks , especially if it be given AA'ith AA'ine ancl raisons of the sun . "

The Foxglove , Avith its lofty steins , handsome leaves , ancl beautiful bells of AA'hite , pink , red , or purple , deserves a separate mention beyond that of its being of such great medicinal A'alue . It is one of the handsomest native floAA'ers Ave have , and there is , perhaps , no move beautiful sight than one of the lanes in tho Yorkshire dales , with its banks Avaving shoulder-high Avith a luxuriant gi'OAvth of Bracken , Male-fern , and Foxglove . Another of the Fig Worts is the Knotted , which frequents woods and moist

grounds ; it may be knoAvn by its tall square stem , notched leaves , heart-shaped at the base ancl tapering to a point , and comparatively insignificant cluster of dingy greenish purple blossoms . This species is named from its knotted root . There is another kind , equally common , which frequents streams , ancl is known as the Water Fig Wort or Water Betony . It may he recognized by a small winged expansion of the angles of its square stem . The odour is disagreeable like that of the Elder . Both species are unwholesomeand disliked

, by cattle , but that they can be eaten Avas proA'ed at the siege of Rochelle by Cardinal Richlieu hi 1628 , when their roots formed the main support of the starving soldiers . The French to this day call the Fig Wort Ilerbe du Siege . Notwithstanding then disagreable odour , the floAvers are attractive to many insects , notably wasps ! There are two other species , the Balm-leaved and the YelloAV , but they are not so common .

Another handsome plant , although hardly , perhaps , a strictly indigenous one is the common Snapdragon that affects the toj ) s of old ancl crumbling Avails . Another variety of this latter jdant is the slender creeping-stemmed Ivy-leaved Snapdragon . The next type of floiver that Ave must notice is the large pea-blossomed or podbearing famdy , for Ave can hardly proceed a yard Avithout treacling upon one or other of them ; here , as Ave speak , at our feet is one member of the tribe—nay , Ave ought to haA'e said branch of the tribefor it is quite a numerous companyAve mean the

Clover—, , Clover Dutch , Clover White , Clover Eed , Trefoil Purple , Trefoil Yellow , Middle , with its zigzag stems and purple blossoms—all unmistakably pea-like or podded , save that instead of the pods hanging upon single stems they are gathered into bunches . In common with all other trefoiled plants—Shamrocks and the like—the Clovers were considered by our ancestors to be antagonistic to evd and " noisome " to AA'andering Avitch or wary AA'izard . The poet alludes to this old notion : —

"Woe , Avoe to the knight Avho meets the green knight , Except on his faulchiou arm , Spell-proof he bear , like the brave St . Clair , The holy Trefoil ' s charm . No doubt the tri-une leaf had to do Avith the foundation of the belief , linking it with the legend of St , Patrick ' s taking , when introducing Christianity into Ireland , as the text of his sermon on the Divine Trinit y in Hnity , the triple leaf of the Shamrock which sprang up from the hole made in the turf by the point of his pastoral staff ,

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