Ultimate Grimoire and Spellbook

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"Eat cress to learn more wit."


Of fruit proverbs we are told that,

"If you would enjoy the fruit, pluck not the flower."


And again:--

"When all fruit fails, welcome haws."


And "If you would have fruit, you must carry the leaf to the grave;"
which Ray explains, "You must transplant your trees just about the fall of
the leaf," and then there is the much-quoted rhyme:--


"Fruit out of season,
Sorrow out of reason."


Respecting the vine, it is said:--

"Make the vine poor, and it will make you rich,"


That is, prune off its branches; and another adage is to this effect:
"Short boughs, long vintage." The constant blooming of the gorse has
given rise to a popular Northamptonshire proverb:--


"When gorse is out of bloom, kissing is out of season."


The health-giving properties of various plants have long been in the
highest repute, and have given rise to numerous well-known proverbs,
which are still heard in many a home. Thus old Gerarde, describing the
virtues of the mallow, tells us:--


"If that of health you have any special care,
Use French mallows, that to the body wholesome are."


Then there is the time-honoured adage which says that:--

"He that would live for aye
Must eat sage in May."


And Aubrey has bequeathed us the following piece of advice:--

"Eat leeks in Lide, and ramsines in May,
And all the year after physicians may play."

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