A Homely Weed 
with 
y^l Interesting Flowers 
f ~ 
HE recent article from my 
pen on the " Riddle of 
the Bluets," and which 
showed the important 
significance of its two 
forms of blossoms, sug- 
gests that a few more 
similar expositions of 
the beautiful mysteries 
of the common flowers 
which we meet every 
day in our walks, and 
which we claim to 
"know" so well, may serve 
to add something to the in- 
terest of our strolls afield. 
It is scarcely fair to assert 
that familiarity can breed 
contempt in our relations to 
