60 THROUGH GLADE AND MEAD. 
‘We must all be merry and moving; we must all be happy 
and loving ; 
For when the midsummer is come, and the grain has 
ripened its ear, 
The haymakers scatter our young, and we mourn for the 
rest of the year ; 
Then, Bobolincon, Wadolincon, Winterseeble, haste, haste 
away |?” 
The June flowers are rivals of the June birds in 
interest. The roses are then in bloom, and the early 
wild rose (Rosa lucida, Ehrh.), the swamp rose (Rosa 
Carolina, L..) and the sweetbrier (Rosa rubiginosa, L.) 
with their bright colors contribute to the beauty of the 
~woodlands. An interesting plant, not now found in 
bloom within the city limits but not rare in the northern 
part of the county and farther north, is the twin-flower 
(Linnea borealis, Gronov.). It gives an additional 
interest to a plant to think that the name of a scientific 
man, famous, world-famous perhaps, in his generation, 
is linked forever with such an obscure memorial. The 
men pass away, and a great part of what they accom- 
plished is forgotten, but the little plants reviving with 
every springtime keep their names fresh in the mem- 
ories of students of plant life. Lzz2z@a is named in 
honor of the great Swedish naturalist, Linnazus, the 
founder of modern botany, and appears, by the “ Jour- 
nal of a Tour to Lapland,” to have been selected by 
