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HAPPINESS - (explored 09.01.2021)

"Lucky clover" and "lucky leaf" redirect here. The term is also often used for the wood-sorrel (Oxalis acetosella) and Oxalis tetraphylla, a common potted plant.

 

Four-leaf white clover (Trifolium repens)

The four-leaf clover is a very rare variation of the common three-leaf clover. According to traditional sayings, such clovers bring good luck,[1] though it is not clear when or how this idea began. The earliest mention of "Fower-leafed or purple grasse" is from 1640 and simply says that it was kept in gardens because it was "good for the purples in children or others". A description from 1869 says that four-leaf clovers were "gathered at night-time during the full moon by sorceresses, who mixed it with vervain and other ingredients, while young girls in search of a token of perfect happiness made quest of the plant by day". The first reference to luck might be from an 11-year-old girl, who wrote in an 1877 letter to St. Nicholas Magazine, "Did the fairies ever whisper in your ear, that a four-leaf clover brought good luck to the finder?"

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Uploaded on January 8, 2021
Taken on September 14, 2019