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(Eoronilla ^liUlCiX. Natural Order: Leguminosce—Pulse Paniily. 
j^ORONILLA is a shrubby plant growing to some three or 
| L four feet in height, and blossoms freely and early in the 
greenhouse or window. There are but few varieties, none 
of which are natives, being all of European origin. Three 
produce yellow flowers; the Coronilla varia has purple ones; 
and the Coronilla Emerus, frequently called Scorpion senna, a 
of France, has blossoms of a rose color. They should have 
shade in summer, and be grown in a light, open soil well 
^ drained. The significance of the name is a little crown, from the shape 
fp of the flower. 
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OOD actions crown themselves with lasting bays, 
Who deserves well needs not another’s praise. 
— Heath. 
^ROWN'D with my constellated stars I stand 
/A SUCH a day, 
Beside the foaming sea, ^ So fought, so follow’d, and so fairly won, 
And from the Future with a victor’s hand, Came not till now, to dignify the times, 
Claim empire for the Free. —Bayard Taylor. Since Caesar’s fortunes. —Shakespeare. 
HUS far our fortune keeps an onward course, 
And we are graced with wreaths of victory. 
— Shakespeare. 
\ PPLAUSE waits on success; the fickle multitude, 
1 1 Like the light straw that floats along the stream, 
Glide with the current still, and follow fortune. 
— Franklin. 
'T'O do is to succeed — our fight 
Is wag’d in Heaven’s approving sight — 
The smile of God is victory. 
— Whittier. 
fjUR toils, my friends, are crown’d with sure success; 
The greater part perform’d, achieve the less. 
— Dryden. 
WISDOM he has, and to his wisdom courage; OUCCESS, the mark no mortal wit, 
Temper to that, and unto all success. ^ Or surest hand, can always hit. 
—Sir J. Denham, —Butler, 
