. Cyclopedia of practical floriculture. Floriculture; Flower language. m ^t0MnA §^iiije< 1 £j)COpOllium romplanatum. Natural Order: LycopodiaceceâClub Moss Family. "-a. ^YCOPODIUM is one of the humbler types of vegetation that in the earher stages of our globe occupied a place of higher rank, and attained a size more worthy of consideration, \ as some of the specimens now existing in a fossil state amply \, show. When other and more important vegetation made ''"'its appearance, the less useful descended to a minor and moie obscure position, till now it scarcely more than lends v


. Cyclopedia of practical floriculture. Floriculture; Flower language. m ^t0MnA §^iiije< 1 £j)COpOllium romplanatum. Natural Order: LycopodiaceceâClub Moss Family. "-a. ^YCOPODIUM is one of the humbler types of vegetation that in the earher stages of our globe occupied a place of higher rank, and attained a size more worthy of consideration, \ as some of the specimens now existing in a fossil state amply \, show. When other and more important vegetation made ''"'its appearance, the less useful descended to a minor and moie obscure position, till now it scarcely more than lends variety to the scene This mossy plant has a round stem, and is frequentl}' tound creeping along the ground in woods that are moist and shady, bemg some five or six feet in length. There are several greenhouse varieties useful for ferneries and hanging-baskets, but they require con- siderable moisture to grow well. The name signifies leveled or hori> zontal wolf's-foot. 'T'HERE are fancies strangely bitter in tlie surge of this restless sea, And hopes, and dreams, and memories, all rising mournfully; The waves that are softly breaking, with stai-ry luster kissed, Summon a host of phantoms out of the ocean-mist. -a,r Rfid. pRIEV'ST thou that hearts should change? ^ Lo! where life reigneth Or the free sight doth range, What long remaineth? Spring with her flowers doth die; Fast fades the gilded sky; And the full moon on high Ceaselessly waneth. âAiionvmot pOME, now again thy woes impart, ^ Tell all thy sorrows, all thy sin; We cannot heal the throbbing heart. Till we discern the wounds within. â Crabbc. WIND-HARP â 'Neath Zephyr' ivelled into perfect song soft touch; Boreas did it a grievous wrong, For he smote it too much â He smote it so rudely, its delicate chords Wailed in musical pain. Saying, in plaintive and mystical words, " We accord not again! " â Gh" â¢50 '.m. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecad, booksubjectfloriculture, bookyear1884