William Shakespeare: a world-famous playwright and poet whose words have shaped English fiction for centuries. Like
many writers throughout history, the Bard took a fair bit of his writing inspiration from flowers- “A rose by any
other name would smell as sweet” is likely the first quote most people will think of, but a surprising amount of
wildflowers have been the subject of Shakespearean soliloquies as well. Here are a few of our favourite flowers that
have the Shakespeare seal of approval.
Violets
represent faithfulness and spirituality; in Hamlet, they’re especially important to Ophelia, the title character’s
love interest and the original tragic flower girl. In her most famous scene, she gives out handfuls of flowers to
the other characters, each rife with symbolism, but specifically mentions that she has no violets, as they died at
the same time as her father Polonius. Suffice to say, it’s a rather clear sign of the sorry state she’s in.
Another flower given out by Ophelia is
rue,
some of which she gives to Queen Gertrude, some she keeps for herself. Rue is a herb renowned for its strong scent
and bitter flavour, and as such is often tied to emotional bitterness and regret. If that symbolism isn’t depressing
enough, Ophelia’s single
daisy
- a symbol of innocence and purity- doesn’t get given to anyone, and in some versions of the play it simply ends up
on the floor.
On a brighter note, Ophelia isn’t the only Shakespearian girl giving out flowers. In The Winter’s Tale, Perdita
distributes flowers among the guests of a sheep-shearing feast, including
mint,
marjoram
and
marigold.
The specific meanings of each plant are less important here: more relevant is that they’re all plants which bloom in
the late summer (leading to a cheeky joke about plants blooming mid-year given to middle-aged recipients) as well as
the fact that they are wildflowers; Perdita claims to prefer wildflowers to the more fanciful flowers bred by man.
These two plays alone merely scratch the surface of Shakespeare’s many, many words on flowers, both in sonnets and on
stage: perhaps his most floral play is A Midsummer Night’s Dream, where much of the action is caused by the love
potion petals of the Love-In-Idleness flower and takes place among a floral, fairy-touched forest. Then there’s
Love’s Labour’s Lost, one of the Bard’s lesser-known comedies featuring a full song on the beauty of wildflower
meadows, ‘When Daisies Pied’!
It makes me wonder, could someone grow a garden based only on blooms recommended by the Bard? It’d certainly be an
interesting challenge to try- who knows, you may discover the perfect plant to make your garden more lovely and
temperate than a summer’s day!