A common and long cultivated European herb from which most common garden pansies are derived.
Sinônimos
Examples for "heartsease"
Examples for "heartsease"
1Averan looked up and, despite the heartsease, his words filled her with sadness.
2Between that rose and this heartsease my poor child was ill.
3Hadria carried still the drooping yellow heartsease that the little girl had given her.
4Here was escape, heartsease, happiness-herein this bottled impishness.
5Did you happen to notice the bed of heartsease?
1Oberon must have touched her eyes with the juice of Love-in-idleness.
2"Now," said Oberon to this little sprite, "fetch me the flower called Love-in-idleness.
1The commonest were wild pansy and forget-me-not, and the rhododendron grew in quantities.
2Under the edge of the footpath through the wheat a wild pansy blooms.
3Another gown was a forget-me-not, one a wild pansy, others peonies.
4They are really a wild pansy.
5They plucked some of the rich flowers, but also took with them the despised buttercup and the wild pansy.
1Neither like an old family physician nor a new johnny-jump-up; just quiet and cool and pleasant.
1Lysimachia vulgaris, Euphrasia officinalis, Rhinanthus crista-galli, and Viola tricolor come under this head.
2Nearly the same result followed with some crossed and self-fertilised plants of Viola tricolor.
3Strictly analogous experiments with Viola tricolor and Lathyrus odoratus gave a very different result.
4This was evidently the case with the crossed plants of Viola tricolor, which ultimately quite overwhelmed the self-fertilised.
5In my first experiments on Viola tricolor I was unsuccessful in raising seedlings, and obtained only one full-grown crossed and self-fertilised plant.