The Folk-lore of Plants eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 288 pages of information about The Folk-lore of Plants.

The Folk-lore of Plants eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 288 pages of information about The Folk-lore of Plants.
and hens” for the Plantago lanceolata.  A Gloucestershire nickname for the Plantago media is fire-leaves, and the hearts’-ease has been honoured with all sorts of romantic names, such as “kiss me behind the garden gate;” and “none so pretty” is one of the popular names of the saxifrage.  Among the names of the Arum may be noticed “parson in the pulpit,” “cows and calves,” “lords and ladies,” and “wake-robin.”  The potato has a variety of names, such as leather-jackets, blue-eyes, and red-eyes.

A pretty name in Devonshire for the Veronica chamcaedrys is angel’s-eyes:—­

  “Around her hat a wreath was twined
  Of blossoms, blue as southern skies;
  I asked their name, and she replied,
  We call them angel’s-eyes."[6]

In the northern counties the poplar, on account of its bitter bark, was termed the bitter-weed.[7]

  “Oak, ash, and elm-tree,
  The laird can hang for a’ the three;
  But fir, saugh, and bitter-weed,
  The laird may flyte, but make naething be’et.”

According to the compilers of “English Plant Names,” “this name is assigned to no particular species of poplar, nor have we met with it elsewhere.”  The common Solomon’s seal (Polygonatum multiflorum) has been nicknamed “David’s harp,"[8] and, “appears to have arisen from the exact similarity of the outline of the bended stalk, with its pendent bill-like blossoms, to the drawings of monkish times in which King David is represented as seated before an instrument shaped like the half of a pointed arch, from which are suspended metal bells, which he strikes with two hammers.”

In the neighbourhood of Torquay, fir-cones are designated oysters, and in Sussex the Arabis is called “snow-on-the-mountain,” and “snow-in-summer.”  A Devonshire name for the sweet scabriosis is the mournful-widow, and in some places the red valerian (Centranthus ruber) is known as scarlet-lightning.  A common name for Achillaea ptarmica is sneezewort, and the Petasites vulgaris has been designated “son before the father.”  The general name for Drosera rotundifolia is sun-dew, and in Gloucestershire the Primula auricula is the tanner’s-apron.  The Viola tricolor is often known as “three faces in a hood,” and the Aconitum napellus as “Venus’s chariot drawn by two doves.”  The Stellaria holostea is “lady’s white petticoat,” and the Scandix pecten is “old wife’s darning-needles.”  One of the names of the Campion is plum-pudding, and “spittle of the stars” has been applied to the Nostoc commune.  Without giving further instances of these odd plant names, we would conclude by quoting the following extract from the preface of Mr. Earle’s charming little volume on “English Plant Names,” a remark which, indeed, most equally applies to other sections of our subject beyond that of the present chapter:—­“The fascination of plant names has its foundation in two instincts, love of

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The Folk-lore of Plants from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.