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  • July 1, 1877
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1877: Page 39

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    Article THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. ← Page 3 of 5 →
Page 39

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

its lesson of the brevity of our existence in this beautiful Avorld , as bright as brief for us , we shall gather a splendid nosegay of summer floAvers , than Avhich no product of green-house or conservatory can be more lovely , if even it be more proudly grand . Here is the upright stem and the croAvn of

bloom of the deep red Corn-cockle , close by stands the bright Blue-bottle andhard b y the gloAving yelloAv heads of the Corn-Marigold ; here , too ( and , indeed , almost everyAvhere ) , Ave may learn weather-Avisdom of the Shepherd ' s Warning , or Scarlet

Pimpenell , whose property of keeping close in damp Aveather ivas noticed by Sir Francis Bacon ; nor is it by any means a bad clock , for it opens and closes most punctually , although it does shut up shop someAvhat early in the day , being never more than a minute or tAvo past tAVO-o ' clock . Another

hnlliant addition to our posy is the blue Succory , a variety of which plant affords the Chicory , which issuchadecided addition ( pardon ! not improvement ) to our matutinal Coffee . Would we add next a lilac floAver to our bunch , there are the little tufts of Field Madder ; whilst of all the crimson

blossoms none can equal for intensity the Adonis or Pheasant ' s eye . Another handsome lilac floAver is the Knautia , Avhilst a deeper purple is afforded by the Knap-Aveed ; one more to give sweet perfume , so we pluck the Marjoram , and , leaving the

cornfield , take to the lane , whose banks and waste-places are positively covered with such a profusion of floAvering plants , that we can do little more than mention a few by name . There is the Red Dead Nettle , as well as its white sister , of which Bishop Mant has

spoken' And there with whorls encircling graced , Of white and purple-tinted red , The harmless Kettle ' s helmet head ; Less apt with fragrance to delight The smell , than please the curious sight . "

There , too , is the Trailing Tansy or Silver Weed , the SoAvthistle ' s yellow bloom , the hnght golden Avens , the climbing Tufted vetch , the primrose-coloured COAV-wheat , the Black Horehound with its purple buds , with Wild fragrant Basil Th

Parsnep , yme , roe heat-resisting YelloAv Bed-straw or bheeae Eennet , the Musk Thistle , the burdock , the dingy cream-coloured ancl evidentl y dangerous Henbane , the equally Jatal but surpassingly beautiful and

variously-colourecS ^& t ^ fjy ^ and the sus ' picious green-floAvered Dog Mercury ; here too , Ave find the dingy-yellow Ploughman ' s Spikenard , Avith the wrinkled Wood Germander or Garlic Sage , the pale Nipple-Wort , and the splendid MalloAV—there

living apparently on nothing is the Biting Stonecrop or Wall Pepper , and here the acrid but delicately beautiful Wood Sorrel ; next to our hand rises the Viper ' s Bugloss , Avhilst hard by is the once vaunted simple blue Common Agrimony ; but little less precious in the herbalist's catalogue is tho Yarrow or Nose-bleed , Avhilst no less valued in the butler ' s list comes the

bluespangled Borage ; another pretty purpleblossomed plant is the Hedge Woundwort , Avhilst close , to us is the Soap-Avort , with its delicate , rose-coloured petals—do we want a charm , here is Vervain ; do Ave seek beauty , even in a seeming freak of naturehere is the Bee Orchis ; Avhilstif

, , we . Avant bringing back from the flights of fancy to the realities of our mundane existence , here is a reminder ready to our hand in the formidable shape of the Great Nettle . A peep over this hedge , in Avhich the profuse white blossoms of the Guelder

Rose or SnoAvball Tree have given place to those handsome clusters of berries , Avliich though now green , will soon ripen into a vivid crimson , and Ave shall see in the adjoining clover-field one of the most extraordinary objects that Dame Nature presents to us in her vegetable kingdom .

We have but feAV native parasitic plants , but here is one of the most singular . The seed of the Broom Rape or Strangle Vetch , frequently lies dormant in the earth for years , until some plant favourable to its groAvth springs up near it , Avhen it

germinates , and striking its suckers into the root points of its neighbour , quickly establishes that most profitable of all partnerships , a participation in profits Avithout sinking capital in the Avorking machinery . Clover is the favourite stock

upon which this parasite battens , and it may be easily seen , for the stem even of the lesser variety is generally more than a foot high . It presents a strange Avithered appearance , being leafless , but having on its stem scales of a dullreddish brown

, colour : its blossoms are of a dingy purple cast , mixed Avith yehW . If Our collection is not complete , let us c

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-07-01, Page 39” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071877/page/39/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
PREFACE Article 2
INDEX. Article 4
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 7
SONNET. Article 7
HISTORY OF THE "PRINCE OF WALES LODGE." Article 8
SUMMER. Article 18
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 19
TRAM-CAES AND OMNIBUSES. Article 22
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 24
THE TRUE FREEMASON. Article 26
TOM HOOD. Article 27
IN MEMORIAM — BRO. GEORGE FRANK GOULEY. Article 30
THE HISTORY OF EDUCATION. Article 32
CARA IMAGO. Article 33
HARRY WATSON; Article 34
EVERY YEAR. Article 36
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 37
BRO. JAMES NEWTON'S SKETCH OF THE CONCORD ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER, No. 37, BOLTON. Article 41
"ABSENT FRIENDS." Article 42
SHIRTS AND COLLARS. Article 43
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 46
A Review. Article 47
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 50
Forgotten Stories. Article 53
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Page 39

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

its lesson of the brevity of our existence in this beautiful Avorld , as bright as brief for us , we shall gather a splendid nosegay of summer floAvers , than Avhich no product of green-house or conservatory can be more lovely , if even it be more proudly grand . Here is the upright stem and the croAvn of

bloom of the deep red Corn-cockle , close by stands the bright Blue-bottle andhard b y the gloAving yelloAv heads of the Corn-Marigold ; here , too ( and , indeed , almost everyAvhere ) , Ave may learn weather-Avisdom of the Shepherd ' s Warning , or Scarlet

Pimpenell , whose property of keeping close in damp Aveather ivas noticed by Sir Francis Bacon ; nor is it by any means a bad clock , for it opens and closes most punctually , although it does shut up shop someAvhat early in the day , being never more than a minute or tAvo past tAVO-o ' clock . Another

hnlliant addition to our posy is the blue Succory , a variety of which plant affords the Chicory , which issuchadecided addition ( pardon ! not improvement ) to our matutinal Coffee . Would we add next a lilac floAver to our bunch , there are the little tufts of Field Madder ; whilst of all the crimson

blossoms none can equal for intensity the Adonis or Pheasant ' s eye . Another handsome lilac floAver is the Knautia , Avhilst a deeper purple is afforded by the Knap-Aveed ; one more to give sweet perfume , so we pluck the Marjoram , and , leaving the

cornfield , take to the lane , whose banks and waste-places are positively covered with such a profusion of floAvering plants , that we can do little more than mention a few by name . There is the Red Dead Nettle , as well as its white sister , of which Bishop Mant has

spoken' And there with whorls encircling graced , Of white and purple-tinted red , The harmless Kettle ' s helmet head ; Less apt with fragrance to delight The smell , than please the curious sight . "

There , too , is the Trailing Tansy or Silver Weed , the SoAvthistle ' s yellow bloom , the hnght golden Avens , the climbing Tufted vetch , the primrose-coloured COAV-wheat , the Black Horehound with its purple buds , with Wild fragrant Basil Th

Parsnep , yme , roe heat-resisting YelloAv Bed-straw or bheeae Eennet , the Musk Thistle , the burdock , the dingy cream-coloured ancl evidentl y dangerous Henbane , the equally Jatal but surpassingly beautiful and

variously-colourecS ^& t ^ fjy ^ and the sus ' picious green-floAvered Dog Mercury ; here too , Ave find the dingy-yellow Ploughman ' s Spikenard , Avith the wrinkled Wood Germander or Garlic Sage , the pale Nipple-Wort , and the splendid MalloAV—there

living apparently on nothing is the Biting Stonecrop or Wall Pepper , and here the acrid but delicately beautiful Wood Sorrel ; next to our hand rises the Viper ' s Bugloss , Avhilst hard by is the once vaunted simple blue Common Agrimony ; but little less precious in the herbalist's catalogue is tho Yarrow or Nose-bleed , Avhilst no less valued in the butler ' s list comes the

bluespangled Borage ; another pretty purpleblossomed plant is the Hedge Woundwort , Avhilst close , to us is the Soap-Avort , with its delicate , rose-coloured petals—do we want a charm , here is Vervain ; do Ave seek beauty , even in a seeming freak of naturehere is the Bee Orchis ; Avhilstif

, , we . Avant bringing back from the flights of fancy to the realities of our mundane existence , here is a reminder ready to our hand in the formidable shape of the Great Nettle . A peep over this hedge , in Avhich the profuse white blossoms of the Guelder

Rose or SnoAvball Tree have given place to those handsome clusters of berries , Avliich though now green , will soon ripen into a vivid crimson , and Ave shall see in the adjoining clover-field one of the most extraordinary objects that Dame Nature presents to us in her vegetable kingdom .

We have but feAV native parasitic plants , but here is one of the most singular . The seed of the Broom Rape or Strangle Vetch , frequently lies dormant in the earth for years , until some plant favourable to its groAvth springs up near it , Avhen it

germinates , and striking its suckers into the root points of its neighbour , quickly establishes that most profitable of all partnerships , a participation in profits Avithout sinking capital in the Avorking machinery . Clover is the favourite stock

upon which this parasite battens , and it may be easily seen , for the stem even of the lesser variety is generally more than a foot high . It presents a strange Avithered appearance , being leafless , but having on its stem scales of a dullreddish brown

, colour : its blossoms are of a dingy purple cast , mixed Avith yehW . If Our collection is not complete , let us c

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