Friday, 9 February 2024

Daffodils – Day 7

 

Daffodils – Day 7

All the daffodils are now open and soon their fragile beauty will begin to fade.

The poem, Daffodils, was written by Charles A. Heath, known as the nature poet. about whom I can find little information.


And now here come the daffodils,

The trumpeters of spring,

All tooting joy, which thrills and thrills,

The while again they bring

Their happiest note attuned with cheer

To tell that spring is truly here. 

 

 I am always glad when daffodils

Lift up their golden horn,

To wake a day whose waking fills

With mellowness the morn,

And lures the southwinds thru the air

To bear away my winter’s care.

 

I always thought the daffodils

Which rise from frigid earth

Were heroines with hearts and wills

To understand the worth

Of holding hope thru days severe,

And burst with joy when spring is here.

 

So blow your best, dear daffodils,

I will listen full and long,

To every note which ever thrills

With your returning song;

And when at night I rest my head,

I will dream sweet dreams thus comforted.

How long will they continue to lend their brightness, how soon before they droop and die? It would be too sad to document their demise and so I bring this journey to an end.

One final poem, this one by Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)

Perhaps you’d like to buy a flower?

 

Perhaps you’d like to buy a flower?

But I could never sell.

If you would like to borrow

Until the daffodil

 

Unties her yellow bonnet

Beneath the village door,

Until the bees, from clover rows

Their hock and sherry draw,

 

Why, I will lend until just then,

But not an hour more!



I hope those of you awaiting your own daffodils will soon be rewarded for your patience. My garden daffodils have not yet bloomed but I found a violet a few days ago! April already?

31 comments:

  1. I didn't know either of those poems - thank you. xx

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  2. Beautiful daffodils. We have had some blooming outside our front door all week but they took a battering in yesterday's wind. Poor things.

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  3. Our garden daffodils are nowhere near flowering yet, but I always like to have a little supermarket bunch, though they're far too cheap - the growers must get pennies, I always feel. Beautiful, though!

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    1. They are very cheap but must be worth the effort, I suppose, or the growers wouldn't bother.

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  4. Our garden daffs are forming their buds, so very soon we will have them in bloom, they stay outside, unless the wind damages them.

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  5. Let me assure you, the early violet is nothing to do with climate change.

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    1. Thank you, Andrew. Since we've had roses in December and January for year past, I just always assume that our garden is a sheltered corner in this busy world ;-)

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  6. Hi Janice - I've loved your daffodil posts ... they do bring joy to us at this time of year ... and now so many varieties. I spotted a crocus recently - I love those ... I remember the carpets of them in Hyde Park as I rode the bus into the city ... cheers Hilary

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  7. Thank you, Hilary. It is lovely to see carpets of crocuses, I agree - well, carpets of any flowers, really.

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  8. I've enjoyed your Daffodil series. I'm enjoying daffodils myself at the moment, such a cheap and cheerful way to brighten up the house at this time of year, though like you, I'm still waiting for the first garden blooms.

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  9. Thank you, Jo. They certainly brighten a dull day.

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  10. This has been fun and beautiful. Thanks. I do know it is disappointing when the cut flowers start to fade off.

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    1. Thank you, Lynn and Precious - I've enjoyed it:-)

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  11. I noticed a violet in a sheltered spot back in October and we've got primroses out in the garden ( the pale yellow ones ) blooming alongside the snowdrops!
    I've loved your daffodils and the poems x
    Alison in Wales x

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    1. Thank you, Alison. It is surprising and delightful to find spring flowers in unexpected places. x x x

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  12. You had me looking around for daffodils yesterday. I want to bring a fist full of buds inside. We are sadly not quite at that point yet.

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  13. It will be some time before my daffs (two varieties, and a few mounds of gloriously scented narcissus) are in bloom, besides the one very anxious bud that still hasn't made it out--so it's lovely to enjoy yours. I do love their tendency to naturalize and spread about the garden, providing a new landscape each spring. Thanks for sharing your bounty with us!

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    1. I like the 'one very anxious bud' - sometimes such buds never quite fulfil their promise.

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  14. My daffodils are started to stick their little green stems through the earth. Getting ready for Easter!

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    1. They are appropriate for Easter, a time of renewal.

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  15. They are just beautiful Janice. I noticed last year, when I put them outside on a table on my deck each night ... they lasted alot longer in bloom than when I left them inside all night. I think I read this somewhere so I tried it & it definately made a difference as otherwise they can tend to wilt very fast. xx

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    1. They don't like too much warmth and our cool conservatory was just right. We do warm it up when we want to sit in there!

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  16. I have enjoyed your daffodil posts.
    Loved the poems today.

    All the best Jan

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  17. No daffodils in our garden just yet, but I saw lots of them on my travels today. Love Emily Dickinson! xxx

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  18. I haven't noticed many - maybe I haven't been noticing. x x x

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  19. Thank you for sharing your daffodil journey over the week. The poems have been beautiful too.

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    1. Thank you. I was pleased that they all flowered!

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