<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</SPAN></span></p>
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<ANTIMG src="images/i008.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="372" alt="Yellow Jessamines" /></div>
<h2>YELLOW JESSAMINES.</h2>
<p class="left45">
<span class="smcap">Mandarin, Fla.</span>, March 14, 1872.</p>
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<p>HEY talk about Florida being the
land of flowers: I'm sure <i>I</i> don't
see where the flowers are."</p>
<p>The speaker was a trim young lady, with
pretty, high-heeled boots, attired in all those
charming mysteries behind and before, and up
and down, that make the daughter of Eve look
like some bright, strange, tropical bird. She
had come to see Florida; that is, to take board
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</SPAN></span>
at the St. James. She had provided herself
with half a dozen different palmetto-hats, an
orange-wood cane tipped with an alligator's
tooth, together with an assortment of cranes'
wings and pink curlews' feathers, and talked of
Florida with the assured air of a connoisseur.
She had been on the boat up to Enterprise; she
had crossed at Tekoi over to St. Augustine, and
come back to the St. James; and was now prepared
to speak as one having authority: and she
was sure she did not see why it was called a
land of flowers. <i>She</i> hadn't seen any.</p>
<p>"But, my dear creature, have you ever been
where they grow? Have you walked in the
woods?"</p>
<p>"Walked in the woods? Gracious me! Of
course not! Who could walk in sand half up to
one's ankles? I tried once; and the sand got
into my boots, and soiled my stockings: besides,
I'm afraid of snakes."
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Then, my dear, you will never be a judge on
the question whether Florida is or is not a land
of flowers. Whoever would judge on that question
must make up her mind to good long
tramps in the woods; must wear stout boots,
with India-rubbers, or, better still, high India-rubber
boots. So equipped, and with eyes open
to see what is to be seen, you will be prepared
to explore those wild glades and mysterious
shadows where Nature's beauties, marvels, and
mysteries are wrought. The Venus of these
woods is only unveiled in their deepest solitudes."</p>
<p>For ourselves, we claim to have experience in
this matter of flowers; having always observed
them in all lands. We were impressed more by
the <i>flowers</i> of Italy than by any thing else
there; yes, more than by the picture-galleries,
the statues, the old ruins. The sight of the
green lawns of the Pamfili Doria, all bubbling
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</SPAN></span>
up in little rainbow-tinted anemones; the cool
dells where we picked great blue-and-white
violets; the damp, mossy shadows in the Quirinal
gardens, where cyclamen grow in crimson
clouds amid a crush of precious old marbles and
antiques; the lovely flowers, unnamed of botany,
but which we should call a sort of glorified blue-and-white
daisies, that we gathered in the shadowy
dells near Castle Gandolpho,—these have
a freshness in our memory that will last when
the memory of all the "stun images" of the
Vatican has passed away.</p>
<p>In our mind's eye we have compared Florida
with Italy often, and asked if it can equal it.
The flowers here are not the same, it is true.
The blue violets are not fragrant. We do not
find the many-colored anemones, nor the cyclamen.
Both can be planted out here, and will
grow readily; but they are not <i>wild</i> flowers,
not indigenous.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well, then, are there others to compensate?"
We should say so.</p>
<p>The yellow jessamine itself, in its wild grace,
with its violet-scented breath, its profuse abundance,
is more than a substitute for the anemones
of Italy.</p>
<p>If you will venture to walk a little way in the
sand beyond our back-gate, we will show you a
flower-show this morning such as Chiswick or
the Crystal Palace cannot equal.</p>
<p>About a quarter of a mile we walk: and then
we turn in to what is called here an oak-hammock;
which is, being interpreted, a grove of
live-oak-trees, with an underbrush of cedar,
holly, and various flowering-shrubs. An effort
has been made to clear up this hammock. The
larger trees have some of them been cut down,
but not removed. The work of clearing was
abandoned; and, the place being left to Nature,
she proceeded to improve and beautify it after a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</SPAN></span>
fashion of her own. The yellow jessamine,
which before grew under the shadow of the
trees, now, exultant in the sunshine which was
let in upon it, has made a triumphant and
abounding growth, such as we never saw anywhere
else. It is the very Ariel of flowers,—the
tricksy sprite, full of life and grace and
sweetness; and it seems to take a capricious
pleasure in rambling everywhere, and masquerading
in the foliage of every kind of tree. Now
its yellow bells twinkle down like stars from the
prickly foliage of the holly, where it has
taken full possession, turning the solemn old
evergreen into a blossoming garland. Now,
sure enough, looking up full sixty feet into yonder
water-oak, we see it peeping down at us in
long festoons, mingling with the swaying, crapy
streamers of the gray moss. Yonder a little
live-oak-tree has been so completely possessed
and beflowered, that it shows a head of blossoms
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</SPAN></span>
as round as an apple-tree in May. You look
below, and jessamine is trailing all over the
ground, weaving and matting, with its golden
buds and open bells peeping up at you from the
huckleberry-bushes and sedge-grass.</p>
<p>Here is a tree overthrown, and raising its
gaunt, knotted branches in air, veiled with soft
mossy drapery. The jessamine springs upon it
for a trellis: it weaves over and under and
around; it throws off long sprays and streamers
with two golden buds at the axil of every green
leaf, and fluttering out against the blue of the
sky. Its multiform sprays twist and knot and
tie themselves in wonderful intricacies; and still
where every green leaf starts is a yellow flower-bud.
The beauty of these buds is peculiar.
They have little sculptured grooves; and the
whole looks as if it might have been carved of
fairy chrysolite for a lady's ear-drop. Our little
brown chambermaid wears them dangling in her
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</SPAN></span>
ears; and a very pretty picture she makes with
them. Coal-black Frank looks admiringly after
her as she trips by with them shaking and
twinkling to his confusion, as he forgets for a
moment to saw wood, and looks longingly after
her. No use, Frank. "Trust her not: she is
fooling thee." Her smiles are all for lighter-colored
beaux. But still she wears yellow jessamine
in her crapy hair, and orders Frank to
bring her wreaths and sprays of it whenever she
wants it; and Frank obeys. That's female
sovereignty, the world over!</p>
<p>In this same hammock are certain tall, graceful
shrubs, belonging, as we fancy, to the
high-huckleberry tribe, but which the Floridians
call sparkleberry. It is the most beautiful
white ornamental shrub we have ever seen.
Imagine a shrub with vivid green foliage, hanging
profusely with wreaths of lilies-of-the-valley,
and you have as near as possible an idea of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</SPAN></span>
sparkleberry. It is only in bud now, being a
little later than the jessamine, and coming into
its glory when the jessamine is passing away.</p>
<p>The regular employment now of every afternoon
is to go out in the mule-cart with old Fly
into the woods, flower-hunting.</p>
<p>It is as lovely an afternoon-work as heart
could wish; the sky is so blue, the air so
balmy, and at every step there is something new
to admire. The coming-out of the first leaves
and tags and blossom-keys of the deciduous
trees has a vividness and brilliancy peculiar to
these regions. The oak-hammock we have been
describing as the haunt of yellow jessamine is
as picturesque and beautiful a tree-study as an
artist could desire. There are tall, dark cedars,
in which the gray films of the long moss have a
peculiarly light and airy appearance. There is
the majestic dome of the long-leaved Southern
pine, rising high over all the other trees, as in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</SPAN></span>
Italy the stone-pine. Its leaves are from twelve
to eighteen inches long; and the swaying of
such pines makes a <i>susurrus</i> worth listening
to. The water-oak is throwing out its bright
young leaves of a gold-tinted green; and the
live-oak, whose leaves are falling now, is bursting
into little velvety tags, premonitory of new
foliage. Four species of oaks we notice. The
live-oak, the water-oak, and a species of scrub-tree
which they call the olive-leaved oak, are
all evergreens, and have narrow, smooth leaves.
Then there are what are familiarly called black-jacks,—a
deciduous oak, which bears a large,
sharply-cut, indented leaf, of a character resembling
our Northern ones. Besides these, the
prickly-ash, with its curiously knobbed and
pointed branches, and its graceful, feathery
leaves, forms a feature in the scene. Underneath,
great clumps of prickly-pear are throwing
out their queer buds, to be, in turn, followed by
bright yellow blossoms.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</SPAN></span></p>
<p>To an uninstructed eye, the pine-woods in
which we ride look like a flat, monotonous
scene. The pines rise seventy, eighty, and a
hundred feet in the air, so that their tops are far
above, and cast no shade. This is a consideration
of value, however, for a winter's ride; for
one enjoys the calm sunshine. Even in days
when high winds are prevailing along the river-front,
the depth of these pine-woods is calm,
sunny, and still; and one can always have a
pleasant walk there. When the hotter months
come on, the live-oaks and water-oaks have
thick, new foliage, and the black-jacks and hickory
and sweet-gum trees throw out their shade
to shelter the traveller. Every mile or two, our
path is traversed by a brook on its way to the
St. John's. The natives here call a brook a
"branch;" and a branch is no small circumstance,
since all the finest trees and shrubbery
grow upon its banks. You can look through
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</SPAN></span>
the high, open pillars of the pine-trees, and
watch the course of a branch half a mile from
you by the gorgeous vegetation of the trees
which line its shores.</p>
<p>We jog along in our mule-cart, admiring every
thing as we go. We are constantly exclaiming
at something, and tempted to get out to gather
flowers. Here and there through the long
wire-grass come perfect gushes of blue and
white violets. The blue violets are large, and,
of necessity, are obliged to put forth very long
stems to get above the coarse, matted grass.
The white are very fragrant, and perfectly
whiten the ground in some moist places.
There is a large, fragrant kind, very scarce and
rare, but of which we have secured several
roots. We are going this afternoon to the
"second branch" after azaleas. We stop at a
little distance, when its wall of glossy verdure
rises up before us. There is no accomplishment
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</SPAN></span>
of a mule in which Fly is better versed than
stopping and standing still. We fancy that we
hear him, in his inner consciousness, making a
merit of it, as we all do of our pet virtues. He
is none of your frisky fellows, always wanting to
be going, and endangering everybody that wants
to get in or out with prances and curvets,—not
he! He is a beast that may be trusted to stand
for any length of time without an attempt at
motion. Catch <i>him</i> running away! So we
leave Fly, and determine to explore the branch.</p>
<p>The short palmettoes here are grown to the
height of fifteen feet. Their roots look like
great scaly serpents, which, after knotting and
convoluting a while, suddenly raise their crests
high in air, and burst forth into a graceful crest
of waving green fans. These waving clumps of
fan-like leaves are the first and peculiar feature
of the foliage. Along the shore here, clumps
of pale pink azaleas grow high up, and fill the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</SPAN></span>
air with sweetness. It is for azaleas we are
come; and so we tread our way cautiously,—cautiously,
because we have heard tales of the
moccasin-snake—fearful gnome!—said to infest
damp places, and banks of rivers. In all our
Floridian rambles, we never yet have got sight
of this creature; though we have explored all
the moist places, and sedgy, swampy dells,
where azaleas and blue iris and white lilies
grow. But the tradition that such things are
inspires a wholesome care never to set a foot
down without looking exactly where it goes.
"The branch," we find, is lighted up in many
places by the white, showy blossoms of the dogwood,
of which, also, we gather great store. We
pile in flowers—azalea and dogwood—till our
wagon is full, and then proceed with a trowel to
take up many nameless beauties.</p>
<p>There is one which grows on a high, slender
stalk, resembling in its form a primrose, that has
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</SPAN></span>
the purest and intensest yellow that we ever
saw in a flower. There is a purple variety of
the same species, that grows in the same neighborhoods.
We have made a bed of these woodland
beauties at the roots of our great oak, so
that they may finish their growth, and seed, if
possible, under our own eye.</p>
<p>By the by, we take this occasion to tell the
lady who writes to beg of us to send her some
seeds or roots of Florida plants or flowers, that
we have put her letter on file, and perhaps, some
day, may find something to send her. Any one
who loves flowers touches a kindred spot in our
heart. The difficulty with all these flowers and
roots sent North is, that they need the heat of
this climate to bring them to perfection. Still
there is no saying what a real plant-lover may
do in coaxing along exotics. The "run" we
have been exploring has, we are told, in the season
of them, beautiful blue wisteria climbing
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</SPAN></span>
from branch to branch. It does not come till
after the yellow jessamine is gone. The coral-honeysuckle
and a species of trumpet-creeper
also grow here, and, in a little time, will be in
full flower. One of our party called us into the
run, and bade us admire a beautiful shrub, some
fifteen feet high, whose curious, sharply-cut,
deep-green leaves were shining with that glossy
polish which gives such brilliance. Its leaves
were of waxen thickness, its habit of growth
peculiarly graceful; and our colored handmaiden,
who knows the habits of every plant in our
vicinity, tells us that it bears a white, sweet
blossom, some weeks later. We mentally resolve
to appropriate this fair Daphne of the woods on
the first opportunity when hands can be spared
to take it up and transport it.</p>
<p>But now the sun falls west, and we plod
homeward. If you want to see a new and
peculiar beauty, watch a golden sunset through
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</SPAN></span>
a grove draperied with gray moss. The swaying,
filmy bands turn golden and rose-colored;
and the long, swaying avenues are like a scene
in fairyland. We come home, and disembark
our treasures. Our house looks like a perfect
flower-show. Every available vase and jar is
full,—dogwood, azaleas, blue iris, wreaths of
yellow jessamine, blue and white violets, and
the golden unknown, which we christen primroses.
The daily sorting of the vases is no
small charge: but there is a hand to that department
which never neglects; and so we breathe
their air and refresh our eyes with their beauty
daily.</p>
<p>Your cold Northern snow-storms hold back
our spring. The orange-buds appear, but hang
back. They are three weeks later than usual.
Our letters tell us frightful stories of thermometers
no end of the way below zero. When you
have a snow-storm, we have a cold rain: so you
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</SPAN></span>
must keep bright lookout on your ways up
there, or we shall get no orange-blossoms.</p>
<p>We have received several letters containing
questions about Florida. It is our intention to
devote our next paper to answering these. We
are perfectly ready to answer any number of
inquiries, so long as we can lump them all
together, and answer them through "The Christian
Union."</p>
<p>One class of letters, however, we cannot too
thankfully remember. Those who have read our
papers with so much of sympathy as to send in
contributions to our church here have done us
great good. We have now a sum contributed
with which we hope soon to replace our loss.
And now, as the mail is closing, we must close.</p>
<p class="p2">P. S.—We wish you could see a gigantic bouquet
that Mr. S—— has just brought in from
the hummock. A little shrub-oak, about five
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</SPAN></span>
feet high, whose spreading top is all a golden
mass of bloom with yellow jessamine, he has cut
down, and borne home in triumph.</p>
<p>What an adornment would this be for one of
the gigantic Japanese vases that figure in New-York
drawing-rooms! What would such a bouquet
sell for?
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