174 
WILD FLOWERS. 
To renovate the sinking powers. 
To soothe the troubled mind, 
When gloomily the welkin lowers, 
And fortune is unkind •, 
“ They comfort man in his distress, 
They smile when he is gay; 
Their fragrance and their loveliness. 
They yield him day by day ; 
For patience and for humbleness. 
No servitors like they.”—H. G. A. 
They are pulled and scattered to the four 
winds, by the hand of careless childhood, yet 
ever do they spring up again for his delight and 
gladness ; they are gathered alike by the soft 
white hand of beauty, and the toil-hardened one 
of industry, unrepining they breathe out their 
fragrant lives on the bosom of the former, and^ 
borne by the latter into the crowded city, they 
strive to beautify and perfume his hot and 
murky dwelling-place. Here is a picture of 
them thus striving :— 
‘A broken flower-pot, with a string secured, 
Contained a living treasure—a green clump— 
(Just bursting into bloom) of the field orchis. 
‘You care for flowers,’ I said, ‘ and that fair thing, 
The beautiful orchis, seems to flourish well 
With little light and air.' 
