1 '"Lots o' spring flowers grow from 'em.'
2 Our Dickon can make a flower grow out of a brick walk.
3 She wondered how long it would be before they showed that they were flowers.
4 Also she began to believe that he knew everything in the world about flowers.
5 He laughed and came back to the log and began to talk about the flower seeds again.
6 She wondered what it would look like and whether there were any flowers still alive in it.
7 He untied the string and inside there were ever so many neater and smaller packages with a picture of a flower on each one.
8 He told her what they looked like when they were flowers; he told her how to plant them, and watch them, and feed and water them.
9 Miss Mary has plenty of money and will you go to Thwaite and buy her some flower seeds and a set of garden tools to make a flower-bed.
10 It was Mrs. Craven's garden that she had made when first they were married an she just loved it, an they used to tend the flowers themselves.
11 She went out into the garden as quickly as possible, and the first thing she did was to run round and round the fountain flower garden ten times.
12 There seemed to have been grass paths here and there, and in one or two corners there were alcoves of evergreen with stone seats or tall moss-covered flower urns in them.
13 She wore a very purple dress, a black silk mantle with jet fringe on it and a black bonnet with purple velvet flowers which stuck up and trembled when she moved her head.
14 He had wandered by blue lakes and thought them; he had lain on mountain-sides with sheets of deep blue gentians blooming all about him and flower breaths filling all the air and he had thought them.
15 Iris and white lilies rose out of the grass in sheaves, and the green alcoves filled themselves with amazing armies of the blue and white flower lances of tall delphiniums or columbines or campanulas.
16 It was bare of flowers because the perennial plants had been cut down for their winter rest, but there were tall shrubs and low ones which grew together at the back of the bed, and as the robin hopped about under them she saw him hop over a small pile of freshly turned up earth.
17 Dickon had bought penny packages of flower seeds now and then and sown bright sweet-scented things among gooseberry bushes and even cabbages and he grew borders of mignonette and pinks and pansies and things whose seeds he could save year after year or whose roots would bloom each spring and spread in time into fine clumps.
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