Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Blossom





The business of a poet, said Imlac, is to examine, not the individual but the species, to remark general properties and large appearances. He does not number the streaks of the tulip.
Samuel Johnson 1709-1784







Forget-Me-Not



A gallant knight and his betroth'd bride,
Were walking one day by a river side,
They talk'd of love, and they talk'd of war,
And how very foolish lovers are.
At length the bride to the knight did say,
'There have been many young ladies led astray
By believing in all their lovers said,
And you are false to me I am afraid.'
'No, Ellen, I was never false to thee,
I never gave thee cause to doubt me;
I have always lov'd thee and do still,
And no other woman your place shall fill.'
'Dear Edwin, it may be true, but I am in doubt,
But there's some beautiful flowers here about,
Growing on the other side of the river,
But how to get one, I cannot discover.'
'Dear Ellen, they seem beautiful indeed,
But of them, dear, take no heed;
Because they are on the other side,
Besides, the river is deep and wide.'
'Dear Edwin, as I doubt your love to be untrue,
I ask one favour now from you:
Go! fetch me a flower from across the river,
Which will prove you love me more than ever.'
'Dear Ellen! I will try and fetch you a flower
If it lies within my power
To prove that I am true to you,
And what more can your Edwin do?'
So he leap'd into the river wide,
And swam across to the other side,
To fetch a flower for his young bride,
Who watched him eagerly on the other side.
So he pluck'd a flower right merrily
Which seemed to fill his heart with glee,
That it would please his lovely bride;
But, alas! he never got to the other side.
For when he tried to swim across,
All power of his body he did loss,
But before he sank in the river wide,
He flung the flowers to his lovely bride.
And he cried, 'Oh, heaven! hard is my lot,
My dearest Ellen! Forget me not:
For I was ever true to you,
My dearest Ellen! I bid thee adieu!'
Then she wrung her hands in wild despair,
Until her cries did rend the air;
And she cried, 'Edwin, dear, hard is out lot,
But I'll name this flower Forget-me-not.
'And I'll remember thee while I live,
And to no other man my hand I'll give,
And I will place my affection on this little flower,
And it will solace me in a lonely hour.'

William Topaz McGonagall











The apple blossom exists to create fruit; when that comes the petal falls

Kabir (Indian philosopher 1398-1519)













Monday, April 6, 2009

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Frost


Frost is the greatest artist in our clime
He paints in nature and describes in rime

Thomas Wood 1799-1845
















Miscellaneous








Adopt the pace of nature, her secret is patience

Ralph Waldo Emerson






























The Cottage Garden






If you have a garden and a library you have everything you need

Marcus Tullius Cicero












If you are going to live by a river, make friends with the crocodile

Indian Proverb







There's music in the sighing of a reed.
There's music in the gushingof a rill.
There's music in all things, if men had ears.
Their earth is but an echo of the spheres.


Lord Byron




































Bluebells


Men stopped giving her flowers.
In her garden, frosted and dried,
the winter plants were a lifetime's
spent bouquets.
She needed to give herself a present.
A bathroom with no mirrors,
white towels to wallow in,
a tub deep enough for remembering.
She had to find the perfect blue,
not iris, not midnight,
the sky's watchfulness
two minutes before dark.
In the paint shop
the young man listened carefully "
mixed lilac, cobalt, amethyst,
a practised conjuror.
They saw it spin into colour,
or he did, she watched
the blackness of his hair.
No grey, he must be half her age.
His eyes when he noticed her
were a quick green sea change.
I can tell he said, when you dream,
you dream of bluebells


Kate Rhodes













Winter Trees







Winter Trees

The wet dawn inks are doing their blue dissolve.
On their blotter of fog the trees
Seem a botanical drawing.
Memories growing, ring on ring,
A series of weddings.
Knowing neither abortions nor bitchery,
Truer than women,
They seed so effortlessly!
Tasting the winds, that are footless,
Waist-deep in history.

Full of wings, otherworldliness.
In this, they are Ledas.
O mother of leaves and sweetness
Who are these pietas?
The shadows of ringdoves chanting, but easing nothing.



Sylvia Plath












Snow





Dust of Snow


The way a crow
Shook down on me
The dust of snow
From a hemlock tree
Has given my heart
A change of mood
And saved some part
Of a day I had rued



Robert Frost





Ode to a Snowdrop

















The Snow-Drop


The snow-drop, Winter's timid child,
Awakes to life bedew'd with tears;
And flings around its fragrance mild,
And where no rival flowrets bloom,
Amidst the bare and chilling gloom,
A beauteous gem appears!

Poor flow'r! On thee the sunny beam
No touch of genial warmth bestows;
Except to thaw the icy stream
Whose little current purls along,
Thy fair and glossy charms among,
And whelms thee as it flows.

Where'er I find thee, gentle flow'r,
Thou still art sweet, and dear to me!
For I have known the cheerless hour,
Have seen the sun-beams cold and pale,
Have felt the chilling wint'ry gale,
And wept, and shrunk like thee!



Mary Robinson (1757 - 1800)