From someone who loves flowers as I do (Persisting Stars):
If you've never been thrilled to the very edges of your soul by
a flower in bloom, perhaps your soul has never been in bloom."
~Audra Foveo ~
Being perfect artists and ingenuous poets, the Chinese have piously preserved the love and holy cult of flowers; one of the very rare and most ancient traditions which has survived their decadence.
And since flowers had to be distinguished from each other, they have attributed graceful analogies to them, dreamy images, pure and passionate names which perpetuate and harmonize in our minds the sensations of gentle charm and violent intoxication with which they inspire us. So it is that certain peonies, their favorite flower, are saluted by the Chinese, according to their form or color, by these delicious names, each an entire poem and an entire novel:
The Young Girl Who Offers Her Breasts,
or: The Water That Sleeps Beneath the Moon,
or: The Sunlight in the Forest,
or: The First Desire of the Reclining Virgin,
or: My Gown Is No Longer All White Because in Tearing It the Son of Heaven Left a Little Rosy Stain;
or, even better, this one:
I Possessed My Lover in the Garden.
~Octave Mirbeau, Torture Garden
Note: The picture above is from some lantana in my garden. I only wish I could grow peonies. Because they are poetry.
12/06/2007
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2 comments:
I have peonies, but the darn blooms are so fleeting -- they seem to be over and done with in just a couple of weeks. :o(
they are poetry and this post today is beautiful poetry :) lovely ... xox
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