A Sentiment

God knew what He was doing when He sent a gentle breeze and brought a lovely butterfly to set my heart at ease. The happiness of your friendship and the gentleness of your words have touched my life in special ways and now I feel assured. Thank you for your loyalty and for reading everyday. I only hope you find things to make a happy day.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Lilacs in a Vase

This is a painting of Lilacs in a Vase....by Edourd Manet...1882.
When you choose a lilac you are planting a shrub that is part of our American heritage - some have even called the lilac the "apple pie of shrubs." Thomas Jefferson planted lilacs at Monticello and lilacs greeted guests as they entered George Washington's flower garden at Mount Vernon. Poet Walt Whitman's elegy to Abraham Lincoln, "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" evokes an image of a lilac bush that may be familiar to many:


In the dooryard fronting an old farm-house near the white-wash'd palings, Stands the lilac-bush tall-growing with heart-shaped leaves of rich green, With many a pointed blossom rising delicate, with the perfume strong I love, With every leaf a miracle - and from this bush in the dooryard, With delicate-color'd blossoms and heart-shaped leaves of rich green, A sprig with its flower I break.


They were carried across the Atlantic by colonists. Lilacs soon found themselves all over North America, arriving by saddlebags and coach. Driving through the countryside you will often see the remains of an old homestead...a broken foundation is all that stands. Around the foundation, still remaining, is the lilac bush. Standing there to remind us of the life years back, when the farmer's wife would come out of the back door, with her apron on...to pick a bouquet for her table.Today there are over 2,000 named varieties of lilacs thanks to many industrious and passionate breeders all over the world. They are easy to grow...I can't imagine a Spring without them. We have two in our yard. I like them to grow naturally...branching out in a free and easy way. I really don't like them to be cut into boxy shapes. Sometimes the blossoms are spoiled by vigorous pruning. Lilacs and forsythia are meant to grow free.
Balisha

6 comments:

Barbee' said...

Love your post, Balisha. White lilacs is one of my favorites. I have been thinking about lilacs and reading Internet info, while trying to think where I can plant some.

Anonymous said...

A very interesting post, Balisha -- I adore lilacs, though they won't bloom here for a while yet. And their sweet scent cannot be matched.

Noelle Johnson said...

I didn't know that they were an American plant. Sadly, they do not grow here in the desert. But they are just so beautiful - I enjoy those grown by others.

Amber Star said...

That is one of the most beautiful picture of white lilacs I've ever seen. We can't grow them around here...too hot in the summer, I guess. Thanks for sharing.

Anonymous said...

Lilacs will always and forever be my favorite flower. They remind me of my childhood and one growing outside my bedroom window. The smell floating in the window in the morning would wake me up. I love them!

One Woman's Journey - a journal being written from Woodhaven - her cottage in the woods. said...

Reading your post - Lilacs - I can smell their scent. One of my favorites.
I bought a new bush for my new garden and posted a close up picture as my header. It turned out beautiful.