The First Snowdrop


Book Description

Alexander Stewart, Viscount Merrick, is honor-bound to marry Anne Parrish after a snowstorm strands them alone together overnight. But nothing is going to force him into living with her when he believes she deliberately ensnared him. He settles her on his country estate and does not see her again until his grandmother, determined to bring them back together, invites Anne to join the whole family at a house party in honor of her Golden Wedding anniversary. Alexander finds Anne much changed, and he discovers that his feelings toward her are changing too. But will his angry, newly confident wife allow herself to be wooed?







The First Snow-drop


Book Description




The First Snowdrop


Book Description

Jack enjoys listening to stories told to him by his granny. He is especially taken by a story that tells of a land beset by winter and of a quest to find the first snowdrop of the year. When his granny falls ill Jack is determined to help her and decides to go on a quest of his own.'The First Snowdrop' is an intergenerational story for our times with illustrations by the author.




Snowdrop


Book Description

Now in paperback, a beautifully illustrated guide to the white and green sign of spring. Elegant flowers dressed in simple white and green, snowdrops look far too fragile to deal with wintry weather. But that’s just what they do, and they have become treasured by horticulturalists for their ability to flower in the earliest parts of the year. In this book, Gail Harland explores the role snowdrops have played in gardens and popular culture alike, as a treasured genus for enthusiast growers and an important symbol of hope and consolation. Harland explores a variety of cultural meanings for the deceptively petit flower. In Victorian England snowdrop bands encouraged chastity among young women. They have been favorite subjects in paintings in many different eras, and today they are the iconic symbols of several hope-giving charities. Poets and writers have written extensively about them, as have pharmacists, who have used their chemical, galantamine, in the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. Today some of their rarer bulbs can fetch record-breaking sums, and annual festivals that celebrate them draw people from all over the world. Walking among their brilliant white beds, Harland offers an ideal companion for any plant-lover who has ever eagerly awaited this treasured sign of spring.







Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society of London


Book Description

Vols. for 1869-1952 include Extracts from the proceedings of the Royal Horticultural Society.




Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society


Book Description

Vols. for 1846-55 include Proceedings at meetings of the society.







Tennyson's The Princess


Book Description