Sunday, February 03, 2008

Making Herbariums With Betsy, Tacy and Tib

“Yoo-hoo, Betsy!”

As a child, I always wanted to yell that. That’s because I always longed to be friends with Betsy Ray, the protagonist of the Betsy-Tacy books by Maud Hart Lovelace. Like me, Betsy read books in maple trees. How much fun it would have been if we could have shared a tree!

There are many fictional landscapes of my heart, places I’ve visited far more times than some actual geographic locations you can pinpoint on a paper map. Deep Valley, Minnesota, at the turn of the century, is one of the best.

I wished I could join Betsy, Tacy and Tib on so many of their escapades. Most of all, I always wanted to join them on the “Big Hill” behind Tacy’s house, where they liked to picnic and gather wildflowers. Their picnic food was the best. If I close my eyes, I can practically smell the cocoa made in a pail over an open fire, or imagine the taste of Tacy’s mother’s plain, unfrosted cake.

I recently discovered a wonderful blog (just right for my winter-weary self) called Wildflower Morning. The lady who has created this beautiful space has issued a call for photos and artwork inspired by wildflowers. I knew I would enjoy looking at the lovely entries, especially as winter cold rages on here in my part of the country. I didn’t realize I would post, but how could I resist this week’s call for “literary wildflowers”?

Because one of the funniest scenes in all the Betsy-Tacy books comes in the seventh book, Betsy Was a Junior. Betsy, Tacy and Tib are high school juniors (Deep Valley High, class of 1910) and for most of the book they’ve been having such a fun time that they’ve neglected their studies a bit. (Rabbit trail I won’t pursue: how uninspiring some public education already seemed by this time…these books were based on Maud Hart Lovelace’s real high school experiences in Mankato, Minnesota during the same years.)

The little girls who used to gather wildflowers have now grown up (at least somewhat) and have discovered, to their dismay, that they are all about to fail Mr. Gaston’s Botany class. And why? Because the herbariums he assigned them to create at year’s beginning are due the next day, and none of them has worked on them all year.

”A herbarium,” said Betsy, “is a collection of dried and pressed specimens of plants, usually mounted or otherwise prepared for permanent preservation and systematically arranged in paper covers placed in boxes or cases.”

“You know the definition all right,” said Tib. “But you can’t turn in a definition tomorrow.”

“How many flowers did he say we had to have?”

“Fifty.”


Thus begins the girl’s merry and manic attempt to create herbariums of fifty flowers each, during the seventeen hours remaining before they need to leave for school the next morning.

”Only nine,” said Tib. “We’re supposed to spend eight of them sleeping.”

“Supposed to spend!...There’s no law about going to bed the night before you have to make a herbarium for botany.”


They do a pretty good job finding flowers in the spring sunshine before the sun sets that evening. Remember, it’s near the end of the school year, so days are long. They find “clover and dandelions, and strawberry blossoms and buttercups, and wild geranium and lupine, and columbine and false Solomon’s-seal.” Hurrying back and forth, they scour across the grass and find “purple violets…(and) the dog-tooth kind…spring beauties and wake robins…bloodroots…Dutchman’s breeches…hepaticas…jacks-in-the-pulpit.”

So many of these flowers I’d never heard of before I came across them in Maud Hart Lovelace’s prose. Some of them I’m still not familiar with entirely, but just typing their names intrigues me and makes me think I should spend some time looking them up!

In the end, of course, Betsy, Tacy and Tib can’t quite find fifty kinds of flowers each, even in Deep Valley in the springtime. But they have a great time trying. They dry them in batches in the oven and stay up almost all night at Tib’s house. They sneak out before the sun is up, cleverly thinking they’ll find more, only to realize to their chagrin that the flowers aren’t open yet. ”Fine botany students we are!” cried Tacy and went off into laughter which made the robins, thrashers, meadowlarks and warblers redouble their efforts at vocal supremacy.

They also finally realize that they could have made good herbariums (at least Tacy and Tib think so) and that they all would have enjoyed it if they’d taken their time and spent the year working on them. They even pass the class...barely, though I always start laughing when I reach that part of the chapter:

”Never, never in my whole life,” said Mr. Gaston (he was twenty-four), “never in my whole career as a teacher,” (he had taught for three years), “have I seen such herbariums! Not a fall flower included!”

But he felt a little guilty, perhaps because he could not identify all the specimens they had presented. At any rate, for whatever reason, he passed them.


So there you have it...one of my favorite literary passages about wildflowers!

10 comments:

Barb said...

I love these books and didn't remember this particular passage. Thanks for relating it and reminding me of days of read alouds with the kids.

Great post,
Barb=Harmony Art Mom

Elizabeth Joy said...

Welcome Beth! I'm so glad you have joined Wildflowers in Winter! I've never read these books before, and will have to see if I can find a copy. Thank you for sharing such a great story with us about all those wildflowers pressed in such a hurry. I'm sure there are others who can relate to such a problem, but didn't have such success. Thank you for such a great post! I look forward to your next entries.

Beth said...

Barb, I have loved the Betsy-Tacy books for years. In fact, I read the first seven avidly as a child (my public library had them) but didn't find the final three until I was in my early 30s and they came back into print. It was like a joyous reunion when I saw them on the bookstore shelves...and of course, I gobbled up the final three with much delight. Now I get to pass them all on to my daughter, which is the best blessing!

Thanks for stopping by...
Beth

Beth said...

Elizabeth Joy,
Thank you so much for the kind welcome. I have thoroughly enjoyed your blog. I can't even recall how I found it a couple of weeks ago, but I love it when God drops these little surprises into our laps.

My husband and I are involved in urban ministry in a very broken, very asphalt covered little town. We're apartment dwellers. I know the Lord has us here for a reason, and I trust him! But sometimes the lack of yard, garden and green in general can make my heart yearn. So finding your blog in the midst of winter was really a delight.

Thanks for visiting here...
Beth

Erin said...

Hehe, that's great! I can recall similar projects that I had to do in school, and the very definite problems of leaving things to the last minute!

Did you ever see the Little House on the Prairie episode where the Ingallses and the Olesons went camping together so their kids could complete their herbariums (or, more to the point, the Olesons crashed the Ingalls' camping trip so Laura and Mary wouldn't wind up with more plants than them)? Hilarious!

Beth said...

Oh my! No, I missed that one...there are major gaps in my Little House in the Prairie viewing, especially somewhere in the middle of the series. I am guessing one of these years I will start renting them on DVD for S. to watch, once we've read a few more of the books together. :-) Sounds like a hilarious episode, akin to the spirit of Betsy-Tacy!

Molly said...

I am not familiar with series of books, but I think that I would have enjoyed the books in my youth. Funny that the students of 1910 like the students of today put their assignments off to the last minute. My sister's name is Betsy.

Beth said...

Yes, it seems some things never change! And student procrastination is one of them apparently!

ellen b. said...

How wonderful. I have never heard of these books but I'll be checking into them. Thanks for introducing me to them...

Beth said...

They are marvelous books. Real treasures of my childhood, and I still re-read them (often) as an adult. In the past year, I've begun reading the earlier books in the series to my five year old and she loves them too, which is a joy.

There are 10 books in all, beginning with Betsy-Tacy (when Betsy is five years old) and ending with Betsy's Wedding (which describes her first year of married life, right around the time of WWI). Happily they're all back in print now. I hope you enjoy them!