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  2. List of plants with symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_plants_with_symbolism

    Youthful beauty and winning grace, [6] rejected love (in Switzerland), "glory of spring," heartsickness and the death of young maidens; [11] rusticity, healing, pensiveness [5] [4] Creeping Willow Love forsaken

  3. Trees in mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trees_in_mythology

    W. B. Yeats describes a "holy tree" in his poem "The Two Trees" (1893). In George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series, one of the main religions, that of "the old gods" or "the gods of the North", involves sacred groves of trees ("godswoods") with a white tree with red leaves at the center known as the "heart tree".

  4. Nine Herbs Charm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nine_Herbs_Charm

    The Nine Herbs Charm, Nigon Wyrta Galdor, Lay of the Nine Healing Herbs, or Nine Wort Spell (among other names) is an Old English charm recorded in the tenth century CE. [1] It is part of the Anglo-Saxon medical compilation known as Lacnunga , which survives in the manuscript Harley MS 585 in the British Library. [ 2 ]

  5. Three Friends of Winter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Friends_of_Winter

    Three Friends and a Hundred Birds by Bian Wenjin, Ming dynasty. The Three Friends of Winter are common in works of art from Chinese culture [9] and those cultures influenced by it. The three are first recorded as appearing together in a ninth-century poem by the poet Zhu Qingyu (朱慶餘) of the Tang dynasty. [8]

  6. Celtic sacred trees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_sacred_trees

    Afallennau (Welsh, 'apple trees') is a 12th-century Welsh narrative poem dealing with Myrddin Wyllt. The Breton pseudosaint Konorin was reborn by means of an apple. The Proto-Celtic word was * *aballā; Old Irish, uball, ubull; Modern Irish, ubhal, úll; Scots Gaelic ubhall; Manx, ooyl; Welsh, afal; Corn. aval; Bret. Aval. [5]

  7. List of mythological objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mythological_objects

    Silphium, a plant that was used in classical antiquity as a seasoning and as a medicine. Legend said that this plant was a gift from the god Apollo. (Roman mythology) Verbena, a plant which has long been associated with divine and other supernatural forces. It was called "tears of Isis" in ancient Egypt, and later called "Hera's tears".

  8. Dodona's Grove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodona's_Grove

    Covered in the poem are the Spanish match, the Gunpowder Plot, the murder of Thomas Overbury, and the assassination of Buckingham. [5] The political criticisms in Dodona's Grove may have contributed to Howell's imprisonment in 1643. [3] In the poem, plants represent prominent persons. [6] The British oak tree in Dodona's Grove represents the ...

  9. Sacred trees and groves in Germanic paganism and mythology

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_trees_and_groves_in...

    Ask and Embla, the first human beings in Norse mythology, created from trees and whose names may mean "ash" and "elm" Dream of the Rood, an Old English poem describing the crucifixion of Jesus from the point of view of a sentient tree; Hlín, a Norse goddess whose name some scholars have suggested may mean 'maple tree'