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Black Flowers - Spooky!
Andy Sturgeon
From black flowers
and the shrieking mandrake to poisonous potions and
the devil’s plants, Andy Sturgeon unveils ghostly
goings on in the garden, just in time for Hallowe’en
Folklore
Apart from Coca Cola, Friends and George Clooney
the Americans have kindly given the world the phenomenon
of ‘Trick or Treat’. In Britain this used
to be known as ‘Demanding money with menaces’,
which carries a custodial sentence, but it’s somehow
become an acceptable Hallowe’en custom. Basically
it’s a sort of polite robbery whereby the perpetrator,
usually wearing a £1.99 ‘scary’ mask, is
civil enough to ring your doorbell before insisting
you hand over money and sweets. If all you can muster
is a bit of fruit and some nuts then your house is bombarded
with eggs, flour, fireworks and whatever else they happen
to have in their arsenal.
Now cabbages may
not seem the most romantic of vegetables but they were
powerful aids to love divination. A Scottish girl would
go into the garden the day before Hallowe’en and
with eyes closed as she pulled cabbage stalks, would
recite:
Hally on a cabbage, and hally on a bean,
Hally on a cabbage stalk tomorrow’s Hallowe’en
The shape of the stalk she pulled out, long, thin, short
or fat revealed the physique of her future husband and
I should think pulling out a cabbage with club root
would have sent many a young girl running off to the
nunnery.
Hazel nuts were also
used on Hallowe’en to discover the extent of a
suitor’s love. They were given the names of prospective
husbands and tossed into the fire. The loudest bang
as they exploded and the brightest flame indicated the
hottest prospect. They would also be laid on the edge
of the grate and the girls apparently chanted: “If
you love me pop and fly, If not lie there silently”,
which of course doesn’t actually rhyme but what
the hell.
Parsley
is probably the plant shrouded in the most ghoulish
folklore. The seed supposedly goes to the devil and
back a number of times before germination, which is
why you never get 100% success rate. ‘Transplant
parsley, transplant death’ the saying goes. If
you receive parsley seedlings
from someone there will be a death in your family. I
was given some by my grandmother once and sure enough,
five years later she died. But I suppose that could
have been because she was 94.
The mandrake,
also known as Satan’s Apple, has long been associated
with witchcraft. The large brown root was popular with
herbalists who used it as an aphrodisiac and a cure
for sterility, and in medieval times it was used by
witches for its narcotic, hallucinogenic properties.
It was thought to resemble the form of a man but I’ve
seen one and what it actually resembles is a nobbly
brown root. The shrieks it allegedly made when it was
pulled up were said to scare a person to death so to
get round this they tied it to a starving dog then waved
a bit of meat in front of its face. Cunning.

Black Flowers
There are lots of spooky black flowers that you can
grow for a truly ghoulish garden. Now’s a good
time to plant tulips like ‘Queen of Night’,
‘Black
Diamond’ and ‘Black
Parrot’, which are very deep purple. For sunny
spots there’s the columbine Aquilegia ‘Black
Barlow’ and hollyhocks Alcea
rosea ‘Nigra’, ‘Black Beauty’
and ’Night Watchman’. For the front of the
border you could grow Iris ‘Study in Black’,
‘Hello Darkness’ and ‘Paint it Black,’
Dianthus nigricans and D. ‘King of Black’
and the annual cornflowers ‘Black Ball’
and ‘Black Boy’. For shady corners there’s
the mourning widow Geranium
phaeum and the hellebore, Helleborus orientalis
‘Little Black’.
About the closest
you get to a black flower is the pansy Viola
‘Bowles’ Black’ and the slightly
bigger ‘Molly
Sanderson’. They really do look black but
you get the faintest hint of purple around the yellow
eye. Like all pansies they hate heat and drought so
try and plant them in the shade of a shrub. They are
basically annual but seed freely and come almost true,
weed out any that show signs of paling.
But it isn’t
all about flowers. There’s the black lily turf
Ophiopogon
planiscapus ‘Nigrescens’ worth growing
for the name alone, which has virtually black, grassy
leaves although it’s actually closely related
to an orchid. The pale purple flowers of summer give
way to shiny black berries and the clumps of leaves
will flourish in a fertile neutral
or slightly acid
soil that doesn’t totally dry out.
Poisons, Witches
and the Devil The monkshood, Aconitum napellus,
is a popular cottage garden perennial
and is the quintessential plant of the occult. The ancient
Greeks believed it sprouted from the spittle of the
hellhound Cerberus and witches used it with cinquefoil,
parsnip, belladonna and soot so they could ‘contact
the other side’. It contains a deadly poison that
slows the heart rate, decreases blood pressure and numbs
pain.
Foxgloves are also
known as Witches thimbles or Dead man’s bells
and are well known to be poisonous. In medieval Italy
they were used for ‘trial by ordeal’. Basically,
suspects were fed with the poison and if they lived
then clearly they were guilty and had to be killed.
If, however, they died then they must be innocent but
sadly by then they would be dead. Clever old Italians.
Articles
reprinted with permission from Greenfingers.com

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