The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft
上QQ阅读APP看本书,新人免费读10天
设备和账号都新为新人

第60章

This has been a year of long sunshine.Month has followed upon month with little unkindness of the sky; I scarcely marked when July passed into August, August into September.I should think it summer still, but that I see the lanes yellow-purfled with flowers of autumn.

I am busy with the hawkweeds; that is to say, I am learning to distinguish and to name as many as I can.For scientific classification I have little mind; it does not happen to fall in with my habits of thought; but I like to be able to give its name (the "trivial" by choice) to every flower I meet in my walks.Why should I be content to say, "Oh, it's a hawkweed"? That is but one degree less ungracious than if I dismissed all the yellow-rayed as "dandelions." I feel as if the flower were pleased by my recognition of its personality.Seeing how much I owe them, one and all, the least I can do is to greet them severally.For the same reason I had rather say "hawkweed" than "hieracium"; the homelier word has more of kindly friendship.