I think I love every plant that starts as a bulb. Starting with crocus on the cusp of spring and working my way to iris in summer, I just can’t get enough of them. I’ve already posted about daffodils; this week I’m being grateful for #tulipmania.
One of my neighbors has them in his front garden, and I cannot
walk by without stopping to admire and shoot them.
But for the past two Sundays I’ve schlepped into the District They
Call Columbia to revel in the tulips at the Omni Shoreham hotel. I mean—just look:
En masse:
In the mid distance:
And close up:
(I've never seen these purple stars before:)
Even this one guy all by himself is spectacular:
In keeping with the floral theme, let’s have something from Robert
Merrick for today’s National Poetry Month entry. The Elizabethan and Jacobean
poets are so much more meaningful to me than their Romantic heirs. Herrick here
compares his lover to flowers, running through the seasons and wrapping it all
up with death.
If that’s not the essence of poetry, I do not know what is.
“A Meditation for his Mistress”
You
are a tulip seen today,
But (dearest) of so short a stay
That where you grew scarce man can say.
You
are a lovely July-flower
Yet one rude wind or ruffling shower
Will force you hence, and in an hour.
You
are a sparkling rose i’th’bud,
Yet lost ere that chaste flesh and blood
Can show where you or grew or stood.
You
are a full-spread, fair-set vine,
And can with tendrils love entwine,
Yet dried ere you distil your wine.
You
are like balm enclosed (well)
In amber, or some crystal shell,
Yet lost ere you transfuse your smell.
You
are a dainty violet,
Yet wither’d ere you can be set
Within a virgin’s coronet.
You
are the queen all flowers among,
But die you must (fair maid) ere long,
As he, the maker of this song.
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