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The wildgeranium, for instance, with its pinkish-purple flowers, is common in our woods.
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The first wildgeranium in the world was discovered here in 1689 and sent to Europe.
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Then comes April bearing in its arms the beautiful columbine, the tiny bluets and wildgeranium.
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A vase of coarse, but effective pottery, full of scented wildgeranium, stood in the midst.
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You may, however, watch all these peculiarities in them if you cannot procure the true wildgeranium.)
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If you desire a flower to pick and use for bouquets, then the wildgeranium is not your flower.
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He planted harebells; violets, blue, white, and yellow; wildgeranium, cardinal-flower, columbine, pink snake's mouth, buttercups, painted trilliums, and orchis.
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The first wildgeranium (malva) in the world was discovered here in 1689 and sent to Europe, where cultivation began in 1710.
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There were wildgeraniums, too, and a thousand white blossoms of the strawberry.
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The violets had disappeared, but they were succeeded by wildgeraniums and rank-growing vetches.
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Blue wildgeraniums also flourish in patches in the meadows, and sometimes cranesbill and campion.
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The small wildGeranium known by that name.
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The grass had gone to seed and turned a rich reddish purple; beneath it grew wildgeraniums whose leaves were already scarlet.
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"That's a wildgeranium," said Susie; "but do you think it looks-much like a geranium?
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White ox-eye daisies love the grass, and many orchids, and in shady places white cow-parsley, and blue wildgeraniums, and all the buttercups.
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Nearby were cranesbills, wildgeraniums with leaves of many teeth and five-petaled reddish-pink flowers, that grew into fruits that resembled the bills of cranes.