Home1815 Edition

BLOSSOMING OF PLANTS

Volume 3 · 157 words · 1815 Edition

the act of blowing, or putting forth flowers or blossoms, called also flowering. The blossoming of the Glastonbury thorn piously on Christmas-day morning, is a vulgar error; owing to this, that the plant, besides the usual blossoming in the spring, sometimes puts forth a few white transient blossoms in the middle of winter. For the blossoming of the rose of Jericho on the same day, as it is commonly held in England, or in the time of midnight mass, as it is held in France, is somewhat more than an error, being really a fraud on one side, and a superstition on the other. This rose, whose leaves are only closed and shrivelled up in winter, will, at any time, upon setting its pedicle in water, expand and blossom anew; because the pedicle being spongy imbibes the fluid apace, and thus fills and swells out the shrivelled leaves: which property some monks have turned to good account.