what do the celts all the date "summers end"
No, you most likely wouldn't fall asleep just from being in a field of poppies like in 'The Wizard of Oz'. Poppies must be harvested. In areas where they're cultivated, they still may be harvested by more primitive means that leave harvesters unprotected from the elements. Traditionally, harvesters use manual means and aren't paid well. So traditionally they never are encouraged to sleep on the job!
A field of poppies causes Dorothy Gale to fall asleep in "The Wizard of Oz."The original 1900 book edition and the beloved 1939 film version of "The Wizard of Oz" are quite different. Among the similarities is the incident in the poppy field, which is one of the events that the book presents and the movie version retains. But in the book Dorothy is rescued by her travelling companions, who get the gracious Queen of the Field Mice to remove the Cowardly Lion also. In the movie, Glinda causes snow to fall and thereby protects everyone from the somnolent dangers of the poppies.
It´s called "Optimistic Voices" It is from the Wizard of Oz and is sung when Dorothy, Toto and the Lion wake up in the field of poppies.
When Frank Baum wrote The Wizard of Oz, opium was legal. It is made from the poppy plant. The poppy is a beautiful flower. The poppy field is a place of beauty where Dorothy gets sidetracked from her goal of The Emerald City. The opium produced by poppies lead to sleep and death. The poppy field represents a warning about the dangers of getting sidetracked by something that looks extremely enticing because it could have a hidden danger.
It is by rescuing the Cowardly Lion from the poppy fieldthat the Queen of the Field Mice repays the Tin Woodman in "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz."Specifically, the Tin Woodman rescues the Queen from a big, hungry, yellow wildcat. The gracious Queen promises to help the Tinman in return some day. The day perhaps comes sooner than she expects when Dorothy, her pet dog Toto and the Lion fall asleep in the deadly poppy field. The Lion cannot be budged until the Queen gets all of her subjects to pull him out of the field and into safety.
No, you most likely wouldn't fall asleep just from being in a field of poppies like in 'The Wizard of Oz'. Poppies must be harvested. In areas where they're cultivated, they still may be harvested by more primitive means that leave harvesters unprotected from the elements. Traditionally, harvesters use manual means and aren't paid well. So traditionally they never are encouraged to sleep on the job!
A field of poppies causes Dorothy Gale to fall asleep in "The Wizard of Oz."The original 1900 book edition and the beloved 1939 film version of "The Wizard of Oz" are quite different. Among the similarities is the incident in the poppy field, which is one of the events that the book presents and the movie version retains. But in the book Dorothy is rescued by her travelling companions, who get the gracious Queen of the Field Mice to remove the Cowardly Lion also. In the movie, Glinda causes snow to fall and thereby protects everyone from the somnolent dangers of the poppies.
A collective noun for poppies is a field of poppies.
Why did only poppies grow in Flanders field.....
flanders field in France
It´s called "Optimistic Voices" It is from the Wizard of Oz and is sung when Dorothy, Toto and the Lion wake up in the field of poppies.
The 'Field of Poppies' was painted in 1890 at Auvers. The 'Poppies in a Vase' 1886 in Paris.
Poppies were grown in Flanders Field.
You Wear Poppies in memory of the soldiers who died on Flanders Field. Because They were the only flowers growing when WW1 was happening. ^_^
Poppies are a symbol of WW I because there is a famous cemetery for soldiers who died in the war, called Flanders Field, in which poppies grow. There is also a famous poem about this.
the person who thought of haveing poppies as a symboll is a man names flanders who was named after the field on witch it first grew.
In Flanders field the poppies grow. Between the crosses Row on row. Poppies grow all over the world. Easily grown in gardens, anywhere with a 120+ day growing season.