A Homely I Teed 



7i.<ii/i 



Interest iiig hloi^ ^ers 



HE recent article from my 

 pen on the " Riddle of 

 the Bluets," and which 

 showed the important 

 significance of its two 

 forms of blossoms, siior- 

 gests that a few more 

 similar expositions of 

 the beautiful mysteries 

 of the common fiowers 

 which we meet every 

 day in our walks, and 

 which we claim to 

 "know" so w^ell, 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 



