71 Plants and Their Meanings
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Now we have Hallmark and Emoji, but there was a time when people borrowed from the plant world to express themselves. While the use of flowers to transmit its feelings has been used for a long time in Persia and the Middle East, practice has really materialized in Victorian times.
And is it amazing? These Chastes victorians were not the most flirtatious group, so why not Say it with flowers? And beyond the Court Court, there was an appreciation of botany that Western culture seems to be missing now.
Today, we command a dozen red roses for our darling because it is the thing to do; But how much the intention to spin a missive with flowers and herbs was charming – an ode to love created by things that grow from the earth.
The meaning of floriography
Known as floriography, flowers have been sent to reveal secret feelings of love and affection – but flowers intended to present Woo could be organized differently to transmit a negative message instead. Just as the 19th century caused complicated social customs, the language of flowers too. So complex, in fact, that whole dictionaries have been devoted to the decoding of delicate disclosure.
Floriography entered the European imagination from 1809 with the publication of the list of Joseph Hammer-Pugstall, “Dictionary of the Language of Flowers”. The first traditional dictionary of Floriography, “La Langue des Fleur”, was published in 1819 by Louise Cortambert (under the name of pen Madame Charlotte de la Tour).
After that, the 19th century saw a flood of similar publications whose symbolic definitions were often different. According to some accounts, while Floriography spread to the United States and beyond, hundreds of different dictionaries of “flower language” have been published.
Since there were so many interpretations, it can be difficult to know exactly what was supposed to mean what. In this spirit, we turn to the former Almanac farmer for our list here. Because if you cannot trust the oldest periodical in published America, who can you trust?
And if you are trying to resume the lost art of floriography, you certainly would not want to send your darling, let’s say, to the lemonying balm for sympathy when what you really wanted to say was the heliotrope for true love, then make sure to pay particular attention!
Create your own coded bouquet
Inspire yourself from the following list.
Aloe: Healing, protection, affection
Angelic: Inspiration
Arborvitae: Immutable friendship
Baccalaureate button: Unique blessing
Basil: Good wishes
Bay: Glory
Susan with black eyes: Justice
Eyelet: Alas for my poor heart
Chamomile: Patience
Chives: Utility
Chrysanthemum: Cheerfulness
Clover, white: Think of me
Coriander: Hidden value
Cumin: Loyalty
Crocus, spring: Formerly of joy
Daffodil: Regard
Daisy: Innocence, hope
Dill: Powerful against evil
Edelweiss: Courage, devotion
Fennel: Flattery
Fern: Sincerity
Forget: Forget
Geranium, with oak leaves: True friendship
Golden: Encouragement
Heliotrope: Eternal love
Holly: Hope
Hollyhock: Ambition
Honeysuckle: Love links
Pierce: Health
Hyacinth: Constance of love, fertility
Hyssop: Sacrifice, cleanliness
Iris: A message
Ivy: Friendship, continuity
JasmineWhite: sweet love
Mantle of the lady: Comfort
Lavender: Devotion, virtue
Lemon balm: Sympathy
Lilac: Joy of youth
Lys-of-The-Valley: Candy
Marjoram: Joy and happiness
Mint: Virtue
Morning glory: Affection
Myrtle: The emblem of marriage, true love
Nasturtium: Patriotism
Oak: Strength
Oregano: Substance
Thought: Thoughts
Parsley: Festivity
Pine: Humility
Poppy, red: Consolation
Pink, red: Love, desire
Rosemary: Memory
Street: Grace, clear vision
Wise: Wisdom, immortality
Salvia, blue: I’m thinking of you
Salvia, red: Forever mine
Savory: Spices, interest
Sorrel: Affection
South wood: Constance, joke
Scent pea: Pleasures
Sweet William: Benchmark
Sweet Woodruff: Humility
Tansie: Hostile thoughts
Tarragon: Lasting interest
Thyme: Courage, strength
Tulip, red: Declaration of love
Valerian: Preparation
Purple: Loyalty, devotion, loyalty
Willow: Sadness
Yarrow: Eternal love
Zinnia: Thoughts of absent friends