Ultimate Grimoire and Spellbook

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CHAPTER XXII.


PLANTS AND THEIR LEGENDARY HISTORY.


Many of the legends of the plant-world have been incidentally
alluded to in the preceding pages. Whether we review their mythological
history as embodied in the traditionary stories of primitive times, or turn
to the existing legends of our own and other countries in modern times,
it is clear that the imagination has at all times bestowed some of its
richest and most beautiful fancies on trees and flowers. Even, too, the
rude and ignorant savage has clothed with graceful conceptions many of
the plants which, either for their grandeur or utility, have attracted his
notice. The old idea, again, of metamorphosis, by which persons under
certain peculiar cases were changed into plants, finds a place in many of
the modern plant-legends. Thus there is the well-known story of the
wayside plantain, commonly termed "way-bread," which, on account of
its so persistently haunting the track of man, has given rise to the
German story that it was formerly a maiden who, whilst watching by the
wayside for her lover, was transformed into this plant. But once in seven
years it becomes a bird, either the cuckoo, or the cuckoo's servant, the
"dinnick," as it is popularly called in Devonshire, the German "wiedhopf"
which is said to follow its master everywhere.
This story of the plantain is almost identical with one told in
Germany of the endive or succory. A patient girl, after waiting day by
day for her betrothed for many a month, at last, worn out with watching,
sank exhausted by the wayside and expired. But before many days had
passed, a little flower with star-like blossoms sprang up on the spot
where the broken-hearted maiden had breathed her final sigh, which
was henceforth known as the "Wegewarte," the watcher of the road. Mr.
Folkard quotes an ancient ballad of Austrian Silesia which recounts how
a young girl mourned for seven years the loss of her lover, who had
fallen in war. But when her friends tried to console her, and to procure
for her another lover, she replied, "I shall cease to weep only when I
become a wild-flower by the wayside." By the North American Indians,
the plantain or "way-bread" is "the white man's foot," to which
Longfellow, in speaking of the English settlers, alludes in his
"Hiawatha":--


"Wheresoe'er they move, before them
Swarms the stinging fly, the Ahmo,
Swarms the bee, the honey-maker;
Wheresoe'er they tread, beneath them

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