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-- "A parsley field will bring a man to his saddle and a woman to her grave," A warning which is not unlike one current in Surrey and other southern counties:-- "Where parsley's grown in the garden, there'll be a death before the year's out." In Devonshire it has long been held unlucky to transplant parsley, and a poor woman in the neighbourhood of Morwenstow attributed a certain stroke with which one of her children had been afflicted after whooping-cough to the unfortunate undoing of the parsley bed. In the "Folk-lore Record," too, an amusing instance is related of a gardener at Southampton, who, for the same reason, refused to sow some parsley seed. It may be noted that from a very early period the same antipathy has existed in regard to this plant, and it is recorded how a few mules laden with parsley threw into a complete panic a Greek force on its march against the enemy. But the plant no doubt acquired its ominous significance from its having been largely used to bestrew the tombs of the dead; the Greek term "dehisthai selinou"--to be in need of parsley--was a common phrase employed to denote those on the point of death. There are various other superstitions attached to this plant, as in Hampshire, where the peasants dislike giving any away for fear of some ill-luck befalling them. Similarly, according to another proverb:-- "Sowing fennel is sowing sorrow." But why this should be so it is difficult to explain, considering that by the ancients fennel was used for the victor's wreath, and, as one of the plants dedicated to St. John, it has long been placed over doors on his vigil. On the other hand, there is a common saying with respect to rosemary, which was once much cultivated in kitchen gardens:-- "Where rosemary flourishes the lady rules." Vetches, from being reputed a most hardy grain, have been embodied in the following adage:-- "A thetch will go through The bottom of an old shoe," Which reminds us of the proverbial saying:-- "Like a camomile bed, The more it is trodden The more it will spread." The common expression:-- "Worth a plum," Is generally said of a man who is accredited with large means, and another adage tells us that, "The higher the plum-tree, the riper the plum." To live in luxury and affluence is expressed by the proverbial phrase "To live in clover," with which may be compared the saying "Do it up in lavender," applied to anyth
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