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ROSES IN HISTORY, LEGENDRY, AND HERALDRY - Part 1

For four thousand years and more the world has extolled the rose as Nature's superb floral creation. Dean Hole said "Her supremacy has been acknowledged, like Truth itself, always, everywhere, by all." From Sappho to modern times all poets have lauded the beauty and perfume of the rose; their highest praise of beauty has often been expressed by comparison with it.

Roses flourished in the gardens of Babylon earlier than 2000 B.C. The Greeks and Romans used the rose at their feasts and in symbols both as decoration and as a charm against many evils, including alcoholic intoxication. Rose blooms were sold in large numbers from extensive gardens devoted entirely to their culture. Garlands of roses were hung at all rejoicings and heads were crowned with rose wreaths. Rose petals were lavishly strewn on beds and floors, and in the paths of favoured people. Cleopatra, in her magnificence, had rose petals eighteen inches deep on her floors. Huge sums of money were spent in purchasing blooms and petals; Nero is said to have spent the equivalent of about £80,000 for roses for one feast alone.

Wines, conserves, perfumes, oils, medicines, lotions, em­balming agents, adornments, honours-the rose came to be used for them all. Rose-water was the only perfume for cen­turies, and it was also used for washing and purifying.

We find references to the rose in writings of all Northern Hemisphere lands-England, America, China, Persia, India, Iceland, Lapland, Russia, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Syria, Greece, and Egypt-and among them all there is never a questioning of the supremacy of "the Queen of Flowers". This title was first bestowed by Sappho, about 600 B.C., in the following words:*

The Rose (mankind will agree),

The Rose the Queen of Flowers should be;

The pride of plants, the grace of bowers,

The blush of meads, the eye of flowers;

Its beauties charm the gods above;

Its fragrance is the breath of love.

In the Authorized Version of the Bible the rose is men­tioned only twice-"I am the rose of Sharon" (Song of Solo­mon ii. 1), and ". . . the desert shall rejoice and blossom as the rose" (Isaiah xxxv. 1)-but the word "rose" does not, in either case, refer to any member of the botanical group genus Rosa. Some authorities identify it with Narcissus tazetta, a sweetly scented flower of a bulbous plant, others with Hibiscus syriacus and others with Hypericum calycinum.

In the Apocrypha, in dealing with the time of the Baby­lonian captivity, there are several references to members of genus Rosa; for example, "Let us crown ourselves with rose­buds" (Wisdom of Solomon ii. 8).

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