"If I knew 

 Only the herbs and simples of the wood, 

 Kue, cinquefoil, gill, vervain and agrimony, 

 Blue-vetch and trillinni, hawkweed, sassafras,' 

 Milkweeds and murky brakes, quaint pipes and sundew. 

 And rare and virtuous roots, which in these woods 

 Draw untold juices from the common earth, 

 Untold, unknown, and I could surely spell 

 Their fragrance, and *their chemistry apply 

 jjj 3 By sw;eet affinities to human flesh, 



Driving the foe and stablishing, the friend— 



O, that were much, and I could be a part 



Of the round day, related to the sun 



And planted world, and full executor 



Of their imperfect functions. 



But these young scholars, who invade our hills, 



Bold as the engineer who fells the wood, 



And travelling often in the cut he makes, ] 



Love not the flower they- pluck, and know it not, 



And all their botany is Latin names." — Emerson. 



SB 



._L 'o 



j ■ - 



vDCT 



Copyright, 1912. 

 By W. S. Blatohley. 



@ %06 \0 



i I \^How ineffably vast and how hopelessly infinite is the study of na- 

 ture! If a mere dilletante observer like myself — a saunterer who gathers 

 posies and chronicles butterflies by the wayside for the pure love of them 

 — were to tell even all that he has noticed in passing of the manners and 

 habits of a single weed — of its friends and its enemies, its bidden guests 

 and its dreaded foes, its attractions and its defenses, its little life history 

 and the wider life history of its race — he would fill a whole book up with 

 what he knows about that one little neglected flower; and yet he would 

 have found out after all but a small fraction of all that could be known 

 about it, if all were ever knowable." — Grant Allen. 



