A primrose is a primrose — well, not always

A primrose is a primrose — well, not always

Primula vulgaris, or common primrose • Photo by Henry Perks on Unsplash

Originally published 9 February 1987

Come with me for a Valen­tine’s walk down the prim­rose path. It is a walk of spring, of young love, and of dal­liance. Just now, in the midst of win­ter, we can use a taste of spring.

Not long ago I took a group of my stu­dents on a win­ter nature walk. One of them was car­ry­ing a vol­ume of the poems of John Donne, a con­tem­po­rary of Shake­speare and Fran­cis Bacon. Notic­ing this, I plucked up a stalk of evening prim­rose from along­side the path. “Here,” I said, hand­ing her the gold­en blos­som­less stalk. “Donne has a poem called ‘The Prim­rose.’ This is a primrose.”

The next day the young woman showed up at my office and asked me if the prim­rose, when in flower, has five petals. “No,” I replied, “I think it has only four.” Now, I must con­fess I was­n’t sure. I know the evening prim­rose best as a win­ter weed, not as a blos­som­ing plant. It is a grand sort of weed, tall and lumi­nous, tipped by gor­geous vase-like calyx­es clus­tered close to the stem.

We looked up the evening prim­rose in my Peter­son­’s Wild­flower Guide. As I thought, it is a four-petaled plant. “That’s fun­ny,” said my young friend, “then the poem does­n’t make much sense.” We looked at Don­ne’s poem, writ­ten at about the time the Pil­grims land­ed at Ply­mouth, which begins:

Upon this Primrose hill, 
Where, if Heav'n would distil
A shower of rain, each several drop might go
To his own primrose…

As we read on, it became clear that the prim­rose of the poem is a five-petaled plant, that can occa­sion­al­ly be found with four petals or with six. These atyp­i­cal blos­soms the poet rejects as being some­thing less or more than the per­fect five-petaled flower that he seeks. The flower, in turn, stands for the woman the poet loves. In Don­ne’s time the num­ber five rep­re­sent­ed the ide­al fem­i­nine nature, com­bin­ing in itself both the odd (three) and the even (two).

It was clear that John Donne was not writ­ing about the evening prim­rose, the only flower in New Eng­land I knew of by that name. The evening prim­rose, we dis­cov­ered from Peter­son­’s guide, is not even a mem­ber of the prim­rose fam­i­ly. In our area of the world, the com­mon mem­bers of the prim­rose fam­i­ly are the starflower, the yel­low looses­trifes, and the scar­let pimpernel.

A trip to the library was required to iden­ti­fy the flower of Don­ne’s poem. And there we found it, the true prim­rose, a small moon-col­ored flower of five petals that is com­mon to the fields and hedgerows of Britain. This is the blos­som, cousin of the cowslip, that is men­tioned so often by Shake­speare, Mil­ton, and Donne.

There was a time in our his­to­ry when almost every com­mon flower or plant had a sym­bol­ic sig­nif­i­cance. The rose, the lily, the for­get- me-not — each car­ried a mes­sage in the lan­guage of love. In this more sci­en­tif­ic age we have lost most of that rich trea­sury of flower lore, lore that entan­gles the prim­rose in a tapes­try of meaning.

The name of the flower derives from the Ital­ian pri­mavero­la, a diminu­tive con­trac­tion of fior di pri­ma vera, the first flower of spring. A Renais­sance cal­en­dar of the flow­ers lists the prim­rose as one of the ear­li­est flow­ers of the sea­son and a token of love:

February 2. The Snow-drop in purest white arraie 
First rears her head on Candlemas daie.
February 14. While the Crocus hastens to the shrine
Of Primrose love on Saint Valentine.

In the lore of flow­ers the prim­rose is wreathed in romance.

A maid who found a prim­rose with six petals, rather than the usu­al num­ber five, and who tucked it into her bosom was sure to find true love. Shake­speare’s “prim­rose path of dal­liance” was tak­en by many young lovers moved by roman­tic desires.

Hun­dreds of the wild­flow­ers of New Eng­land are immi­grants from Britain. Many of them arrived here with the first colonists, and with them came the sym­bol­ic lore of plants. In the case of the prim­rose, the lore arrived with­out the flower. Many of us have read of Shake­speare’s “prim­rose path” and Mil­ton’s “soft silken prim­rose” with­out ever know­ing the plant that was referred to. And now that I think of it, the stiff and lanky evening prim­rose of New Eng­land’s road­side verges is an unlike­ly can­di­date for the poet­’s del­i­cate flower of spring that turns a young man’s fan­cy and sets a maid­’s heart afluttering.

Our his­to­ry began as a colony of Britain. From Britain came our lan­guage and a great part of our lit­er­a­ture. Also from Britain came yarrow, mullein, Queen Anne’s lace, lady’s thumb, but­ter-and-eggs, hawk­weed, chick­o­ry, the com­mon dan­de­lion, and a host of oth­er com­mon plants. The evening prim­rose, a native of North Amer­i­ca, was quick to trans­plant itself to Europe. But some­how, in all of this trans-Atlantic botan­i­cal traf­fic, the poet­’s prim­rose got left behind, and with it a lit­er­ary invi­ta­tion to true-love in the spring. Per­haps so amorous a plant could not find a con­ge­nial place in the stern com­pa­ny of Puri­tans and Pilgrims.

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