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                                              Intro Mary Garden

The Discovery of Old Religious Plant Symbolism

The symbolism for many of the flowers named of old for the Blessed Virgin Mary - as recorded from oral traditions in plant dictionaries and botanists' floras (field research reports) - is immediately evident from the flower colors and forms or liturgical times of bloom, such as those for Mary's Gold, Our Lady's Mantle and Assumption Lily. . . . Where the physical basis for a symbolical name from the research is not immediately apparent, clues are sometimes to be found in books on plant lore; but it is well to corroborate these through actual inspection of the plants. Thus, several books give the basis for the name of Our Lady's Seal, or Solomon's Seal - still the common name for this plant today - as coming from the supposed resemblance of the cross-section of the root stock protruding at the ground level, after the leaves and stems wither and die, to the seals used to impress embossed designs on the wax used to close letters in former eras. Accepting this explanation at first, we gave it little further thought - until Fall came and we had difficulty even in finding the roots of this plant, by then entirely underground. Finding them, we were unable to make the association on inspection. We therefore gave preference to another name for this plant, from the research, of Our Lady's Belfry, obviously based on the arching branches with rows of tiny pendant bell-like blooms. It was only a number of years later that it occurred to us to look at the pendant blooms from below, upon which it was immediately apparent that, when thus viewed, they resembled the double equilateral triangle of the religious Solomon's Seal six-pointed star symbol. Interestingly, we did find in the literature that the digging up of plant roots for inspection is not in vain, in that a European wild orchid was known as Our Lady's Hand from the palm-with-fingers shape of the dug-up white roots. . Others also required a little time. In first examining the columbine, we were puzzled as to the basis for the name - Our Lady's Shoes - until we discovered that, when the spent blooms began to fall apart, the separated spurs resembled slippers when they fell onto the leaves or the ground at the base of the plants. It took us some years to appreciate that the name Lady-Lords, still given today to the wild Arum in England, evidently came from the resemblance of the spadix and spathe of each bloom of this plant to the Romanesque frontal sculptures of the Virgin and Child - Our Lady and Our Lord. While it was evident why the pendant blooms of fuchsia would have been seen as Our Lady's Eardrops, it was not apparent to us at first why the blooms of garden balsam were known as Our Lady Earrings - until we realized that it was the ring-like curved stems of the flowers which were the basis for the name. (Several of the balsams are also known, from the bursting open of their seed pods when touched, as Touch-me-not - from the words of the Risen Christ to Mary Magdalene. We also wondered why these or any flowers would be named Our Lady's Eardrops or Earrings - until on reflection we realized that this was a popular folk way of paying tribute to Mary who, through her ears, "heard the word of God, and kept it". . Another interesting naming is that of Virgin's Pink, and of garden pinks in general. We at first assumed this was some sort of association simply from the color, but we then learned that the name pink came from the bloom of several of the flowers of this genus in Europe at the end of May, at Pentecost time, or Whit Sunday, known in Holland as Pinkster. Presumably the serrated edges of the flower petals were seen as delicate tongues of flame of the Holy Spirit descending at Pentecost on Mary, Mother of the Church and Mediatrix of grace to the Apostles. These same pointed petals are also said to be the basis for the naming of the pinking, and pinking shears, of garment making. It was only after we learned of the name (in translation from the German) of Our Lady's Little Ladle for the hardy cyclamen, that we noticed the blooms of this flower always face upwards, so that for the lower, pendant blooms, the resultingly curved stems give the flower-stem combination the appearance of cooking ladles. Other names have been enriched by legends. The flower, Star of Bethlehem, according to imaginative legend, had its origins when the actual star, after leading the Wise Men to the nativity manger in Bethlehem, exploded into a myriad of parts which fell to the ground surrounding the manger, rooting themselves as flowers. A similar legend relates that the star, after leading the Wise Men to Bethlehem, indicated the actual location of the Infant Savior by rooting itself as a glorious golden chrysanthemum at the entrance to the manger - from which we designate the chrysanthemum as Epipheny Flower. Another Nativity legend is that of the Christmas Rose, reputed to have been created when an angel swept the ground with its wings so that a young girl adorer would have a gift for the Christ Child, to give along with those of the Shepherds and Wise Men. Other legends provide a rich theological basis for plant names, such as the legend of the origin of the name, Mary-loves, for the red and white English daisies. According to this legend, Mary's knowlege from scriptural prophecy that the Infant Savior under her care was to undergo torture and death for the redemption of the world was given a startling reality at their Nazareth home one day when the child Jesus, after cutting his hand, first shed some drops of his precious blood on the ground, turning some of these originally all-white plants to red. This change of color was perceived as symbolizing the interior immolation of Mary's motherly love, in initial fulfillment of the prophecy of Simeon to her at the Presentation of the Child Jesus at the Temple that her own soul a sword would pierce, joining her interior immolation of heart and soul with Jesus' immolation of the Passion and Cross - "that the thoughts of many hearts will be revealed" - in their compassionate conversion for the salvation of the world. These, then, are some of the joys of Mary-Gardening: the discovery, of and reflection on, the symbolical forms of the Flowers of Our Lady on which their love-names of the research are based - quickening our love for Mary as we work and reflect in the garden. One author likens the quest for the origins of some of the more elusive of these names to the gathering of petals blown from flowers in an attempt to find the plants from which they came. As another author has said, when we do rediscover a symbolism that has been lost, it is like coming upon an old elixir whose savour has been enhanced by its hidden mellowing through the silence of the centuries - such as the piety of the medieval Age of Faith, so longed for today. Finally, it should be appreciated that the old names of plants from the popular oral traditions of the countrysides - recorded by botanists and folklorists - are, like legends, testimony to the popular faith of the illiterate people of the medieval rural countrysides that otherwise would have been lost. In the Random House Encyclopedia, Professor Christopher Hill of Oxford, writes, in "History and Culture": "In our century of the common man we have become embarrassingly aware of how little we know about the lives of ordinary people until relatively recently. About women and children - three-quarters of the human race - we are even more ignorant. We can know a few members of the ruling class as individuals in classical Greece or Rome, in Chaucer's or Shakespeare's England. It is virtually impossible to achieve such knowledge about the bottom 80 to 90 percent of the population until we approach very modern times." From this he conjectures that "The reason why we think of the Middle Ages in Western Europe as "an age of faith" may be only that only those who knew how to write were almost exclusively ecclesiastics." Happily we have the old symbolical religious names of plants, and the living forms of these plants, in all their beauty and freshness, on which this symbolism was based, bearing testimony to the broad basis of the Age of Faith in the religious traditions of the countrysides of this predominantly rural, illiterate culture. John S. Stokes Jr. Copyright Mary's Gardens 1996