Perfect palette of color in the lawn-wide Fairy Dell.
Pictures of growing spring, and farms, and homes,
With the Fourth-month eve at sundown, and the gray smoke lucid and bright,
With floods of the yellow gold of the gorgeous, indolent, sinking sun, burning, expanding the air;
With the fresh sweet herbage under foot, and the pale green leaves of the trees prolific;
In the distance the flowing glaze, the breast of the river, with a wind-dapple here and there;
With ranging hills on the banks, with many a line against the sky, and shadows;
With the Fourth-month eve at sundown, and the gray smoke lucid and bright,
With floods of the yellow gold of the gorgeous, indolent, sinking sun, burning, expanding the air;
With the fresh sweet herbage under foot, and the pale green leaves of the trees prolific;
In the distance the flowing glaze, the breast of the river, with a wind-dapple here and there;
With ranging hills on the banks, with many a line against the sky, and shadows;
And the city at hand, with dwellings so dense, and stacks of chimneys,
And all the scenes of life, and the workshops, and the workmen homeward returning.
And all the scenes of life, and the workshops, and the workmen homeward returning.
Walt Whitman "When Lilacs Last . . .'
We're still in the mud-stage from last sunset's quick, fast Gully-Washer---so dark, I hurried out to put the cans out, then a bright hour and a half before the real dark fell velvet blue. But this morning, I noticed four clumps of tulip greens---the faithful old things were here when we moved in, and that's 29 years ago. Last year they didn't even bloom, but we left them there in hope, sorta like a faithful old dog who's outlived his huntin' days, but still deserves a place by the fire.
And Miss Effie, the nesting flamingo who sits at the foot of the BIG TREE, will soon lay a few tiny pastel eggs in her nest, in honor of the Season. She's been with us since three houses ago. You DO know that flamingoes sitting on a nest are NOT TACKY, don't you? Just wanted to be sure.
And all over the beds, small remnants of Used-to-Be narcissus and jonquils and hyacinth are peeping out---remnants of impulse grabs at the check-out of many a long-ago wait-in-line a the grocery, the fillin' station, and other places that stick the pretty temptations RIGHT THERE while you're waiting and have your wallet out anyway---those bulbs dried in a sack in the fridge drawer to give them the whole renewing-cycle of a REAL year, if they're lucky, and tossed toward the mulch pile in June and missed, if they weren't.
The moss is a verdant blanket of velvety hues, all across the back garden, and with all this lovely weather lately, REAL Spring promises to be right around the corner. Before we know it, the grapevines will be sending out their little seeking fingers and the Fairy Dell is already filling with the gleamy leaves of millions of little purple violets. Something about hundreds of yellow dandelion blooms scattered upon that moss among the dainty purples---the color wheel knows what it's doing---perfection. The Winter-crimped carpet of ivy is already beginning to green up and shine, and even a couple of bushes have either retained lots of fresh leaves, or they're just jumping out to get a head start.
I'm headed out now to shear off a few limbs of the Honeysuckle visible from Leah's high window---it's waving in the constant breeze out there snugged up with the wind chimes, and perhaps I'll pick a blossom or two, put my tongue to the honey, and for a moment, be EIGHT again, lying in clover, tasting the hot Summer sweetness of those years---dusty feet, scabbed knees and all.
I can only dream of that wonderful scent of your honeysuckle! Enjoy! I hope you've been well
ReplyDeleteI lost my blog due to a glitch in my phone_yahoo_Google. So I've started a new one, Old Prairie Moonlight.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=http://oldprairiemoonlight.blogspot.com/&ved=2ahUKEwiG5_ertPCTAxWAmWoFHVCZCksQFnoECBgQAQ&usg=AOvVaw31nBwpc079ATl6qaU5NW1G
That was me, Gayla.. above. From oatmealandwhimsy
ReplyDeleteOh Joy and Jubilation!!! I read all the way through, then saw it was YOU---what a treat. I think of you so often, and have peeked back in many times to see if you're posting. Old Prairie Moonlight isays so much about so much--such scenes pass before my thoughts. The first one was of a wagon train halted at the end of an endless hot day, and the fiddler was playing whilst everybody danced. What a scene that was!
DeleteI think often of the folks of your heritage, and the ones who preceded you out from the familiar East when it was HARD to get there, and hard living when you did. Just hoping and trusting youve been well and warm---I think of your unthinkable DOLOR and cannot fathom how you got up in the morning for a great while---such a blow, and such memories to sustain you. I've been immersed in memories these past almost-six years---writing lots of them, especially for the children to remember or to know.
Our yard is totally surrounded with greenery on one end, and I'm found many a full moon night, dancing round the Fairy Dell and the arbor. Happy Spring to you way out there on that Moonlight Prairie---I hope you nights of sweet sleep, and many moonlight dances, as well.
Wonderful!
ReplyDeleteIt IS wonderful to have all the greenery just jumping out of the ground, and every day's glance at the forest of the back lawn is more shady/shadowy green than the last, with the leaves doubling overnight. I hope yours is lovely as well.
DeleteI so adore honeysuckle and its fragrance. Lucky you!
ReplyDeleteOh, YES!! Little children of the South treat honeysuckle as a Food Group, I think. We've sucked on Honeysuckle, the fiery reds of Maypops, the GREENTH of clover stems, and whatever fruit happened to appear on trees or bushes. Our after-school snacks were a cucumber ripped from the vine, -sanded of its prickly little warts, with a trip by the salt-cellar in the kitchen---ditto for a ripe tomato wiped twice down a shirt-front and magically sterile. A dip into Mammaw's Hoosier Cabinet for a square of cornbread was lagniappe.
ReplyDeleteI love honeysuckle and we don't have any where we are! I used to love it in the spring in the mountains of PA...that and forsythia were the harbingers of spring! I hope you have a happy blessed weekend.
ReplyDeleteI hardly ever read comments but saw Oatmeal & Whimsey and wondered what had happened to Gayla. Going to look her up right now! xo Diana
We're so glad to have her back---she's in full wonderful form with writing her days---she can make scouring a sink into an afternoon stroll with Eleanor Lavish. Wonderful to see YOU, M'Dear!! I hope you and your Lovie are well and warm and enjoying such lovely weather as ours.
DeleteThank you so much for your lovely comment left on my blog and for following me. That truly excites me. I haven't had a new follower in some time now. You asked about a railroad . . . No railroad, but a wonderful hayfield. I love watching the farmers when they mow the hay and bale it and it smells heavenly.
ReplyDeleteI loved reading your post. I am a visual person and love photos, but you didn't need them. You have a way with words that paints pictures in my mind. Also I could tell that we have much in common, even our childhood, laying in the clover, looking up at the clouds, scabby knees. I feel so sorry for the children that are growing up with a phone glued to their hand. Childhood should be an adventure of the senses and the imagination.
Have a lovely week and God bless you.
Your new blogging sister, Connie :)
Oh, How LOVELY!!! To see a reply and such kind words and a new PERSON!! What a sweet bit of happenstance, just from a title on a friend's blog. I've met such outstanding folks and several treasured FRIENDS through this magical medium, and some we've actually MET and traveled with. Like Minds and Hearts seem to follow the words and pictures to each other.
DeleteI Imagined the railroad from a long reddish line way out in the distance in the picture with that magnificent teapot---to my train-loving heart it seemed to be a LONG line of boxcars, traveling to wonderful places. That was one thing about my small-town raising---the track was one block down, in wonderful hearing of my windowscreen---and now we live within about four blocks from where they sing me to sleep all the the night. SO lovely to see a new FRIEND!!
P.S. I tried following your blog and I got a message that I had met the quota of how many blogs I could follow. I have some that I followed that have quit blogging so I'll see if I can't delete some and come back and become a follower of yours. 🥰
ReplyDeleteOh, My Goodness! I know of no such time as this---a new person with such a wish to join in, and you'll take the time to sift out a long-ago, passed-on beloved blog to make a niche for me. I don't think I can categorize that kind of honor, and I've had many through these dear friends far and wide. I just recovered one who had totally lost her site into the NOTHING and is BACK, after an unthinkable tragedy, writing and working and sharing once again with friends. I don't know all these whys and wheres, or if these replies on MY mailbox will reach you, but WELCOME!! It's one of the loveliest introductions I've ever had.
ReplyDeleteGood morning from the other side of the world - and thank you for the comments. You unearthed a post that I had COMPLETELY forgotten had happened, how funny is that! Yes, blogged since way back in the early days of blogging but some years were pretty sparse.
ReplyDeleteWe are heading into Autumn here, so starting to get a bit of a nip in the mornings although the days are still so lovely.
AWWWW!! what a great compliment that you replied! I have had several Antipodeal friends over these few years, and have lost track of some during the five years since COVID. So glad to hear from you---I felt a common-wit pouring from just those two posts, and also lots of other possible experiences and happenings. Looking forward to more happy delves into your fabulous gift of words---words are my FRIENDS and I love finding a kindred spirit. Happy AUTUMN!!! It's fifty and raining here, so the sunny honeysuckle is now dripping outside the windows. We're in Heartland USA. So glad to meet you, Jeanie!
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