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However, the statue was found under the same wild rose the next day.
The name refers to the wild roses in the area.
At first he called his new home "Rose", after the many wild roses growing there.
O, the wild rose blossoms On the little green place.
Why would a wild rose grow in a vacant lot, anyway?
He saw some wild roses and put a few stems in his bag.
This time he turned away to stare at the wild roses without seeing them.
Otherwise, what would wild roses be doing out in the middle of a clearing?
And love held so long in her heart bloomed like wild roses.
The girl picked up another flower, and began on it; a wild rose, this time.
Their daughter, born a year later, was named for the wild roses on the prairie.
"The important thing now is to lay our hands on Wild Rose."
There they were received from her hands a blessing and a wild rose that would bring them good luck.
If my child sees only one wild rose, life will be worth living.'
Here, at the edge of the Forgotten, grew wild roses, red as blood.
Then a wild-eyed woman appeared with wild roses in her hair.
In this particular case I used wild roses, plus their buds and leaves.
Behind the line you met peasants wearing wild roses over their ears.
Wild Rose is well known for having a "no preservatives" policy with their beer.
"Can I fix the table with ferns and wild roses?"
First blood to the Wild Rose, and the crowd went crazy.
He just knew the Wild Rose was a disaster waiting to happen.
"The wild rose needs no walls to protect it," Doyle said.
"Is not a wild rose sweet as any garden bloom?
The wild rose is a familiar sight in woods and hedges.
He spoke of the wild brier that smiles in the sun and yields its incense to the passing breeze.
A dog-rose - the wild brier kind - conveyed the message "you enchant me."
Eastward it butts on orchard closes and the village gardens, brimming over into them by wild brier and creeping grass.
I passed by his garden, and saw the wild brier The thorn and the thistle grow broader and higher; The clothes that hang on him are turning to rags; And his money still wastes till he starves or he begs.
The island's name is believed by some to come from the wild brier roses found there, another possibility is that the original name of the Island was "Bryer's" after a sea captain from New England who was one of the first settlers to spend any time on the island.