Elizabeth Melville [...] received gifts from [Herman] Melville of James Andrews' Floral Tableaux [...] An extensive search has not located a copy of Andrews' Floral Tableaux, which should be useful for Mardi.Davis, Merrell R. Melville's Mardi, a Chartless Voyage. Yale UP, 1952. 59.For the flower messages from Hautia, Melville drew on the currently popular books on the language of flowers; he used Mrs. Frances S. Osgood's The Poetry of Flowers or other similar flower books, at least one of which Elizabeth Melville owned.Foster, Elizabeth S. "Historical Note." Mardi. Eds. Harrison Hayford, et al. Evanston and Chicago: Northwestern UP, 1970. 674-675.Author: Andrews, James, 1801-1876.Title: Floral Tableaux.Publication: London: David Bogue, 1846[?].Sealts Number: 13Association: Owned by Herman Melville.Location: Not known to survive.Notes: Purchased by Herman Melville for 6 dollars from his publishers Wiley and Putnam on 12 December 1846, as revealed by the entry "1 Floral Tableaux 6" in the firm's statement of his account for 1 January 1847 (HMP bMS 188 [519]).Melville's Marginalia Online. http://melvillesmarginalia.org/Search.aspx
Floral Tableaux is an attractive book consisting of six illustrations and six accompanying poems: The Moss Rose, The Iris, The Camellia, The Geranium, The Fuchsia, The Petuna [sic]. Of those flowers, only the first two named are to be found in Mardi (unless other names are used for them); both also feature in his posthumously published Weeds and Wildings Chiefly: With a Rose Or Two. As such a slim gift book it would seem unlikely to have done much more than further color Melville's interest in floral symbolism.Andrews' Floral Tableaux contains an advertisement for Tilt's Illustrated Classics: Cowper's Poems, and Thomson's Seasons and Castle of Indolence, and several flower books:Flora's Gems; or, The Treasures of the Parterre in Twelve BouquetsThe Romance of Nature; or, The Flower Seasons IllustratedOur Wild Flowers Familiarly Described and IllustratedLessons in Flower Painting; In a Series of Easy and Progressive StudiesThe Poetry of Flowers; A Selection of the Best Poems on FlowersReflections on a Flower GardenProgressive Drawing-Book of Flowers for BeginnersLe Langage des FleursAlso appearing below, an odd item (where else to mention it?) about a variety of petunia "the best of all" evidently named "Herman Melville" in 1889. Of course the name was not unique to the author; e.g. the 1880 US Census shows a farmer named Moses Melville in Newport, Illinois with a son named Herman B. Melville. However, plants more clearly referencing the author include:• "Rhododendron 'Moby Dick.'" Missouri Botanical Garden. https://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx?taxonid=253471&isprofile=0&pt=2&tt=1• "Daylily 'Moby Dick' (Townsend-J., 2010)." American Hemerocallis Society Online Daylily Database. https://www.daylilies.org/DaylilyDB/detail.php?id=164574&name=Moby%20Dick• "Moby Dick (Brill 99)." Hosta Library. http://www.hostalibrary.org/m/mobydick.html

![Surplus stock. Roses: Papa Gontier, Sunset, Perle des Jardins, Hermosa, Sombrieul, M. Niel, La France, Niphertos, C. Mermet, C. R. du Pare, Washington (Noisette), fine plants, from 3-inch pots, $6 00 per 100; 2-inch pots, $4 00 per 100. Smilax, 2-inch, fine per 100, $3 00 Alyssum, double [per 100] 3 00 Begonia Rubra, 3-inch [per 100] 4 00 Begonia Alba Picta (new) fine [per 100] 4 00 Staphelia Serpentina [per 100] 3 00 Eucharis Amazonica, 4-in, fine, per doz 2 00 New Bronze Geraniums, Fire of Tacoma, Bash Bish, and Annette Gourbermann. Send for descriptive circular, per doz. $2 00. New double fringed petenia, Herman Melville, the best of all, ready Jan. 1st. Send your order now. Orders booked and filled in rotation. Price, 25c. each; $2.50 per doz. Beach & Co. Richmond, Ind.](http://static1.squarespace.com/static/5f7228bde5b93209aa78902b/5f883f289a4e57266f0d5a75/5f883e759a4e57266f0d4f6a/1602764405086/beach-co-richmond-indiana-herman-melville-double-fringed-petunia.png?format=original)