Daffodils are a symbol of selfishness.But in modern times the flower carries a positive meaning and that which brings good news and announces the arrival of spring. Daffodils are native to southern Europe and northern Africa.It comes in a variety of colours such as pink,yellow,white and orange.Daffodils look like a trumpet and have elongated leaves.Daffodils can also be an indicator of change. The scientific name of this flower is Narcissus which comes from the Latin language.There is sad background related to this flower and many believe that it brings unhappiness and broken love.A White daffodil is a commonly decorates a grave.However the yellow daffodil is a lone symbol of strength and wealth. Narcissus was a very beautiful young man.According to the legend of Greek Mythology he fell in love with his image in the water.He was so in love with the image that he stopped eating and drinking and didn't do anything else.Eventually he died and later a daffodil bloomed in the same spot and thus fell the name of the flower. Another legend has it that the God Zeus loved the company of Nymphs and visited them often on Earth.His wife became suspicious of his visit and decided to catch him red handed.Echo tried to help them but a realisation dawned on Hera which made her punish Echo who from that day could only repeat the last sentences of others. Later Echo fell in love with Narcissus who was in love with himself.She tried to describe her love to him.ButNarcissus rejected her for his image was more beautiful.With a broken heart Echo begged Narcissus but in vain and herself faded into only a voice. (Daffodils is one of the best known works of William Wordsworth the English Romantic poet, first composed in the year 18
A beautifully illustrated, visually lush and intriguing book about the world's most popular and most powerful flower. The daffodil is the beautiful first flower of spring, the inspiration of poets, a treasure-trove to scientists and a symbol of everything from unrequited love, rebirth, eternal life and misfortune. Over centuries, the daffodil has been so many things to so many people: it was called 'Narcissus' by the Greeks and prized by the Romans as guarantee of passage to the Underworld; it was used by medieval Arabs and ancient Chinese for its medicinal properties and it has inspired poets, lovers, artists and scientists down the ages. But in telling the story of the daffodil, what award-winning, best-selling writer Helen O'Neill is really telling is the story of humanity. It's a narrative of progress from superstition and myth, taking in politics, greed, religion, science, chance, redemption and love. But, appropriately enough for a flower that is now used on a worldwide basis to raise funds for cancer research, it is, above all, a story of hope. Moving, fascinating, eloquent, and also beautiful. 'O'Neill manages to make a biography of a flower feel like something of a detective novel, love story, historical drama and horticultural research paper rolled into one' Sydney Morning Herald
In Make Learning MAGICAL, educator Tisha Richmond pulls back the curtain to reveal strategies you can use to transform your classroom. Laughter, fun, and gamified experiences can make school a place where students are inspired, empowered, and immersed in learning. The techniques Tisha shares will equip you to put your students center stage.
Lynn Peters' sharp and funny poems have appeared in magazines and newspapers in the UK, USA and Australia, been broadcast on TV and radio and used as study materials in school and colleges. The poems are collected here for the first time.