A LITTLE GARDEN CALENDAR
[a/]
A Little Garden
Calendar
For Boys and Girls
by
Albert Bigelow Paine
Author of "The Little Lady, Her Book,"
"The Arkansaw Bear," Etc.
With Forty-six Illustrations
PHILADELPHIA
HENRY ALTEMUS COMPANY
Copyright, 1905, by Henry Altemus
Published March, 1905
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
| The Little Lady, Her Book, | $1.00 |
| The Arkansaw Bear, | 1.00 |
| The Wanderings of Joe and Little Em, | .50 |
A Word to Teachers and Parents
When Dr. S. P. Langley, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, established the Children's Room in that great museum, he took for his motto, "Knowledge begins in wonder," and he put into this room a selection of specimens especially intended to excite interest in the young mind. The biggest bird and the littlest were placed side by side; curious eggs, nests, and insects—not many in number, but temptingly displayed—were ranged about to attract attention and to awake the desire to know more. It was the same Dr. Langley who had once declared that his chief interests in life were children and fairy stories, and it is in the little Washington room that we seem to find the thought embodied, for the children are there, and the fairy stories of nature are suggested on every hand.
It is with Dr. Langley's motto in mind that the "Little Garden Calendar" is offered to parents and teachers, and to children themselves who are old enough to read. The author has tried to tell in simple language a few of the wonders of plant life, and to set down certain easy methods of observation, including planting, tending, and gathering the harvests, from month to month, throughout the year. Along with this it has been his aim to call attention to the more curious characteristics of certain plants—the really human instincts and habits of some, the family relations of others, the dependence of many upon mankind, animals, and insects, and the struggle for existence of all. Simple botany plays a part in the little narrative, which forms a continuous story from chapter to chapter, interwoven with a number of briefer stories—traditions, fairy tales, and the like, all relating to plant life and origin. These are presented by way of entertainment—to illuminate fact with fancy—to follow, as it were, the path of knowledge through the garden of imagination.
The illustrations in this book are from excellent photographs—especially made for the various chapters—that the student of plant life may compare and identify with some degree of assurance as to varieties and particular specimens, especially in the matter of plant organisms. The volume is divided according to the calendar, for the reason that in the plant world there is interest for every month in the year if only someone is by to point the way, and it is for this purpose that the little story of Prue and Davy and their garden is offered to instructors in the schoolroom and at home, and to the young people themselves, with the greetings and good wishes of
The Author.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | ||
| January, | [13] | |
| I | You may begin your garden right away | |
| II | Your garden may not look as I have it here | |
| III | Many seeds are given wings | |
| IV | I think seeds know the months | |
| February, | [43] | |
| I | Little plants won't stand much handling | |
| II | Hey for the merry little sweet pease | |
| III | Even clover belongs to the pulse family | |
| IV | Beans and morning-glories twine to the right | |
| V | The honeysuckle twines always to the left | |
| March, | [73] | |
| I | Still it was really a radish | |
| II | The sun swings like a great pendulum | |
| III | Long before there were any railroads and cities | |
| IV | Did you ever see the little man in the pansy? | |
| April, | [103] | |
| I | The yellow dust is a food for the seed | |
| II | The coming of the corn | |
| III | Cross by name and cross by nature | |
| IV | A peppery family | |
| V | For in that dish was Davy's corn | |
| May, | [131] | |
| I | Sweet pease have to be put down pretty deep | |
| II | Different families of ants have different droves of | |
| cows | ||
| III | There are many ways of producing species | |
| June, | [159] | |
| I | Then they went down into the strawberry patch | |
| II | How the rose became queen | |
| III | The sun is the greatest of all | |
| July, | [187] | |
| I | A plant is divided into three principal parts | |
| II | There are exogens and endogens | |
| III | I don't see what weeds are for, anyway | |
| August, | [211] | |
| I | There are just two kinds of leaves | |
| II | Sometimes I think plants can see and hear | |
| III | There are plants which do not bloom | |
| IV | The princess by the sea | |
| September, | [241] | |
| I | A flower really has clothes | |
| II | A flower has many servants | |
| III | A flower may really reason | |
| IV | Some flowers live off other flowers and plants | |
| V | The prince and the thread of gold | |
| October, | [267] | |
| I | Seeds are made to be planted | |
| II | There are bitter nuts and sweet ones | |
| III | There are many things called fruits | |
| November, | [291] | |
| I | There are annuals, biennials, and perennials | |
| II | Plants know how to spread | |
| III | All thanks for the plants | |
| December, | [313] | |
| I | New gardens in the windows | |
| II | To the garden of sleep | |
| III | In the gardens of Christmas | |
| IV | Some verses, and then good-by |
ILLUSTRATIONS
| PAGE | |
| [Frontispiece] | |
| Davy's window—Prue's window | [19] |
| The beans at the end of two weeks | [23] |
| The morning-glories two weeks old | [27] |
| The pot of radishes | [35] |
| The pease two weeks old | [37] |
| The corn at the end of two weeks | [47] |
| The pease run up straight ladders | [53] |
| A member of the pulse family | [59] |
| The morning-glory twines to the right | [65] |
| The nasturtiums began to hide the little pot | [75] |
| The very small lettuce leaves | [81] |
| Davy's pot of radishes | [93] |
| "Davy's corn sent out a plume at the top" | [97] |
| "The morning-glories had bloomed and already had seed | |
| pods" | [113] |
| "Cabbage" was the fat fellow's name | [115] |
| "They called it nasturtium" | [121] |
| Alyssum—the sweetest of the "Cross" family | [123] |
| "Don't you think the blackberry looks a little like a wild | |
| rose?" | [135] |
| "And the apple blossom, too?" | [139] |
| Budding | [149] |
| The Chief Gardener's strawberries | [161] |
| Big, big berries that looked so good | [165] |
| The rose stamens and pistil which produce the seed | [175] |
| "Gardeners often take a rose of one kind and shake it | |
| gently over a rose of another kind" | [178] |
| "Sometimes the gardener takes up the pollen on a soft | |
| brush and lays it gently on the stigma of another | |
| rose" | [179] |
| The pistil and stamens of the lily | [192] |
| A pistil and calyx and a complete flower | [193] |
| A group of endogens—the lily, hyacinth, and daffodil | [195] |
| Some simple leaves | [217] |
| Pine-needles are leaves | [218] |
| There is a lot of kinds and shapes | [221] |
| "Beware of the vine with the three-part leaf" | [253] |
| The dandelion is bound to spread its seed | [256] |
| "So it blooms below the lawn-mower's cutting-wheel" | [257] |
| "They cling to everything that passes" | [269] |
| Three members of the acorn family | [277] |
| The apple is a calyx. The pistil is the core inside of it | [283] |
| A raspberry is a cluster of pistils without the core | [285] |
| The seed and sets of the onion | [295] |
| A black raspberry vine preparing to spread | [299] |
| "What are stuck-ins?—oh, slips!" | [301] |
| The wool that grows on the sheep's back is there because | |
| the sheep feeds on the green grass in summer | [307] |
| A Japanese fern-ball | [316] |
| The kind of a tree that nobody but Santa Claus ever raises | [323] |
JANUARY
A LITTLE GARDEN CALENDAR