THE USE OF FLOWERS[1].
[Footnote 1: See the frontispiece.]
Just one moment longer, cousin Mary,
I want to put this flower in your hair. Now doesn’t
it look sweet, sister Aggy?”
“Oh, yes! very sweet. And
here is the dearest little bud I ever saw. I took
it from the sweet-briar bush in the lane. Put
that, too, in cousin Mary’s hair.”
Little Florence, seeing what was going
on, was soon, also, at work upon Mary’s hair,
that, in a little while, was covered with buds and
blossoms.
“Now she is our May Queen,”
said the children, as they hung fondly around their
cousin, who had come out into the country to enjoy
a few weeks of rural quiet, in the season of fruits
and flowers. “And our May Queen must sing
us a song,” said Agnes, who was sitting at the
feet of her cousin. “Sing us something
about flowers.”
“Oh, yes!” spoke up Grace,
“sing us that beautiful piece by Mrs Howitt,
about the use of flowers. You sang it for us,
you remember, the last time you were here.”
Cousin Mary sang as desired.
After she had concluded, she said—
“Flowers, according to these
beautiful verses, are only useful as objects to delight
our senses. They are only beautiful forms in nature—their
highest use, their beauty and fragrance.”
“I think that is what Mrs Howitt
means,” replied Grace. “So I have
always understood her. And I cannot see any other
use that flowers have. Do you know of any other
use, cousin?”
“Oh, yes. Flowers have
a more important use than merely giving delight to
the senses. Without them, plants could not produce
fruit and seed. You notice that the flower always
comes before the fruit?”
“Oh, yes. But why is a
flower needed? Why does not the fruit push itself
directly out from the stem of a plant?” asked
Agnes.
“Flowers are the most exquisitely
delicate in their texture of all forms in the vegetable
kingdom. Look at the petals of this one.
Could any thing be softer or finer? The leaf,
the bark, and the wood of the plant are all coarse,
in comparison to the flower. Now, as nothing is
made in vain, there must be some reason for this.
The leaves and bark, as well as wood, of plants, all
have vessels through which sap flows, and this sap
nourishes, sustains, and builds up the plant, as our
blood does our bodies. But the whole effort of
the plant is to reproduce itself; and to this end it
forms seed, which, when cast into the ground, takes
root, springs up, and makes a new plant. To form
this seed, requires the purest juices of the plant,
and these are obtained by means of the flowers, through
the exquisitely fine vessels of which these juices
are filtered, or strained, and thus separated from
all that is gross and impure.”
“I never thought of that before,”
said Agnes. “Flowers, then, are useful,
as well as beautiful.”
“Nothing is made for mere beauty.
All things in nature regard use as an end. To
flowers are assigned a high and important use, and
exquisite beauty of form and color is at the same
time given to them; and with these our senses are
delighted. They are, in more respects than one,
good gifts from our heavenly Father.”
“Oh! how I do love the flowers,”
said Agnes; “and now, when I look upon them,
and think of their use as well as their beauty, I will
love them still more. Are they so very beautiful
because their use is such an important one, cousin
Mary?”
“Yes, dear; I believe this is
so. In the seeds of plants there is an image
of the infinity of our great Creator; for in seeds
resides a power, or an effort, to reproduce the plants,
that lie concealed as gems within them, to infinity.
We might naturally enough suppose that flowers, whose
use it is to refine and prepare the juices of plants,
so as to free them from all grosser matters, and make
them fit for the important office of developing and
maturing seeds, would be exceedingly delicate in their
structure, and, as a natural consequence, beautiful
to look upon. And we will believe, therefore,
that their peculiar beauty depends upon their peculiar
use.”