
Viola Tricolor: a Novel and Therapeutic Remedy
The common name of Pansy (older form ‘Pawnce,’ as in Spenser) is derived from the French pensées, the name which is still used in France. Shakespeare’s Ophelia says of pansies in Hamlet, “There’s a pansy, that’s for thought,” because their name comes from French pensée, “thought.” In traditional “flower language,” pansy’s three colors-purple, white, and Read More …