The sweet-briar and cabbage-roses and southernwood filled the caravan with their fragrance.
2
She gathers the white southernwood, Along the streams in the valleys.
3
She gathers the white southernwood, By the ponds, on the islets.
4
She filled her skirt with a harvest of aromatic plants, southernwood, mint, verbenas.
5
I am going to call the southernwood 'appleringie' after this.
6
A favorite shrub in our garden, as in every country dooryard, was southernwood, or lad's-love.
7
It had the savour of old sculleries and southernwood.
8
Clothes were stored in a chest, sometimes with sweet-smelling herbs such as lavender, rosemary, and southernwood.
9
The southernwood had strong medicinal qualities, and was used to cure "vanityes of the head."
10
The "hyssop, or southernwood," the reader now knows to be the wild sage, or sage-brush.
11
The southernwood wakes him, and the green seeds of the caraway get him well along through the sermon.
12
And she gathered up the aromatic greenery, the southernwood, the mint, the verbenas, the balm, and the fennel.
13
Mugwort, southernwood, and wormwood are still to be found in old gardens: they stand here side by side.
14
There was a little garden in front of it, filled with sweet flowers, large cabbage-roses, southernwood, rosemary, sweetbriar, and lavender.
15
The rosebush, small honeysuckle, pulpy-leaved thorn, southernwood, sage, box-elder, narrow-leaved cottonwood, redwood, and a species of sumach, are all abundant.
16
And I will here give a picture of such a boy-thechild associated in my mind with a spray of southernwood.