The Project Gutenberg EBook of Wildflowers of the Farm, by Arthur Owens Cooke
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Title: Wildflowers of the Farm
Author: Arthur Owens Cooke
Release Date: September 1, 2004 [EBook #13347]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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[Illustration: VIOLETS.]
[Illustration: ALMOND AND APPLE BLOSSOM.]
THE COUNTRY-LIFE-READERS
BY ARTHUR O. COOKE
FLOWERS OF THE FARM
CONTENTS
I. Introduction
II. In the Coppice
III. Flowers on the Walls
IV. Three Handsome Weeds
V. Clover
VI. In "Ashmead"
VII. In the Hay-field
VIII. In the Hay-field (_continued_)
IX. In the Corn-field
X. In the Corn-field (_continued_)
XI. On the Chase
XII. In the Lanes
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
I think that some of you have been with me at Willow Farm before to-day.
When we were there we went into the farmer's fields in early spring, and
saw the men and horses at work with ploughs and harrows. A little later
on we saw some of the crops sown, such as barley and turnips. In summer
we were in the hay-and corn-fields, and later still we saw the ricks
being made.
To-day we are at Willow Farm again, and I want to show you some of the
flowers that grow there. I do not mean those which Mrs. Hammond, the
farmer's wife, grows in her garden, pretty as they are. We will look
rather at the wild flowers in the fields, the hedges, and by the
road-side in the lane. No one sows their seed nor takes care of them in
any way; yet they grow and blossom year after year, and nearly all of
them are beautiful.
Before we begin to look at them we must make sure that we quite
understand just what a flower is. Even those of you who live in large
towns and have perhaps never been in the country, see flowers of some
sort, I feel sure; you see them in shop windows and they are also often
sold in the streets. You have seen wallflowers and daffodils in the
spring, roses in the summer, violets in winter, as well as other kinds.
You do not need to be told that these are flowers.
What ab
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