16 
LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS. 
lightful ideas and recollections for which, dur¬ 
ing my solitary journeys, I have been indebted 
to the chronicle of Flora.” 
A flower-garden may be compared to a pano¬ 
rama of hieroglyphics, displaying not the mise¬ 
rable worldly wisdom of mortals, inscribed in 
dead characters, hut the maxims of immortal 
philosophy, exhibited in living forms, with all 
their peculiar varieties. Fancy traces a sym¬ 
bolic resemblance between man and the forms 
and motions of all the natural objects in the 
creation ; and, to borrow Chateaubriand’s bold 
metaphor, the whole universe may he considered 
as the imagination of the Deity rendered visible; 
yet certainly this similarity is most particularly 
striking in the vegetable world. The most 
superficial observer cannot fail to perceive that 
plants present faithful emblems of the various 
stages of human life, and the most remarkable 
peculiarities in our physical formation, and in 
our moral relations to each other. 
In those southern regions, where every living- 
being feels the influence of vital heat and the 
exciting oxygen which pervades the atmosphere 
—where the genial climate, with scarcely any 
