GSae 
oa 
alo 
meee, 
NEEEEEGERECEEECEERGEEGE EROS EEE 

Ae 
E 



ww SENTIMENT OF FLOWERS. 7 @ 
@ Oo 
Qo aes xB 
join the procession, bear baskets of flowers, % 
<4 which they offer to the saints. The sweet & 
xg scents of the rose, cassia, Jessamine, orange, &% 
=4 and tuberose, mingle with the odor of the 
3 burning incense, and almost overpower the a 
senses.” Y 
Ww wy 
28 And we have May day, though nowalas! % 
84 the festivities of that day are becoming less SB 
*% universally celebrated. Either the inhabi- % 
% tants of once ‘“merrie England” are less % 
wo. : x 
% light-hearted than in days of yore, or there oe 
24 is less sociality among us; and perhaps the a3 
eg coldness of the season has tended somewhat % 
% toward its desuetude. G 
w ; : @ 
@ But we must now turn more immediate- % 
wW . . . * Mi 
a3 ly to notice flowers in connexion with lan- &% 
ae ae 
8% guage, and we shall find that nearly all na- 3% 
% tions are acquainted with the language or & 
% sentiment of flowers. The custom of us- @ 
*% ing flowe f ing thoughts © 
g3 ing flowers as a means of conveying thoughts % 
“% and sentiments is of Eastern origin, and of 3% 
%% very remote antiquity; we find them asim- 
ages of some poetical idea, or as represent- & 
@@ ing a virtuous or vicious quality, frequently @&% 
ae mG a ed as ey 
% introduced in oriential writings, both sacred % 
es iB 
% and profane. Some, consecrated to tender ¥ 
VEECEKERRRECEREERERECERCREEEES 



