Thursday, August 23, 2012

Love of the English Daisy


Emerging in the fresh clear air English Daisies remind us that the earth renew herself again, lifting our minds to the beginning of spring Sun People are picking, to prices in the art and poetry of the English Daisies for centuries.

People have beliefs about where the innocent daisy that has stood the test of time. We use English Daisy to aspects of our true love to predict and as a symbol of life after our loved ones and for centuries artists have pictures of the English Daisy in paintings.
English Daisies be thought of as a "cure" for hysteria because of the way the leaves are compacted together. It is believed that placing English Daisy pictures around the house in a time of crisis, excitement would be to create peace in the home that the house to keep a loving pleasant place to live.

English Daisy symbolizes innocence, loyal love and meekness, which is reflected in the famous love divination "He loves me! He loves me not!" where a young woman would be a petal alternating between the two, hoping to discover whether the man she really loves her love to draw. There are a few variants of the petals pulling divinations for the mind to predict her future husband. "Rich Man, Poor Man, Beggar man, thief, doctor, low, banker, chief" or "Rich Man, Poor Man, Beggar man, thief, merchant, tailor, banker, chief." Our daughters still play the "He loves me! He loves me not "love divination today as a game.

In accordance with the picking of the English daisy to a young woman of the future to predict that they would reach in a patch of English Daisy with her eyes closed and hopefully draw a small group of English Daisies. Each Daisy flower could symbolize one year they would have to wait until they marry.

As a young women the roots of a real daisy under her pillow to dream of her future husband on.

English Daisy is a symbol of rebirth since the Middle Ages. We continue daisies of our recently deceased to post. Although a much larger form of Daisy is now placed in the wreaths for the funerals of our loved ones.

Our love for English Daisy drives us to plant them in our garden beds, hang pictures of them and place them on our dining tables for centuries.

Corrie Garneau is a new blogger who is blogging about her adventures in making money from home. Yes, another 'make money from home blog, but Corrie's blog is a blogumentary - if you like - on what worked and what did not.

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