Monday, February 25, 2019

It might be spring

It might be spring

by Laura Harrison McBride

We had no lilacs at our city house in France--so I painted some on the security gate on our front window.


A funny winter, this last. Hardly
any cold weather. What there
was seemed colder than usual.
Still, the camellias began to bloom
in January. The white one I see
driving home from Waitrose
flowered at the appointed time. But
the snowdrops were late. The
lipstick-coloured camellias—the
Kiss Me Corals and Strike Me Pinks--
have only been out a week or so. No
matter; they are dropping dead heads
as usual, littering the ground below
with mushy brown dying flowers. They're
a mess, camellias are, after they bloom.
I don't like them.

I like neater plants—for instance, lilacs,
whose blossoms just get dry if they are
left unpicked. Not in this house, of course.
I pick all the lilacs. I would pick every lilac
there was, if I could. I'd bury my nose
in an armful of lilacs, the old lavender
kind—no use for white or deep purple
or red-purple because they smell funny,
not like lilacs.

I live here for the lilacs. After a nomad's
life for sixty years, I've got three planted,
an old traditional, a miniature Syrian
(dark purple, sigh) and a topiary old purple
lilac in a tub on the deck. I wonder if any
will give me armloads of blooms before
I die. It takes a while for a bush to reach
armload status, and—after eight years
since the first was planted—we are not there yet.

They say people live until a special event
happens in their lives, one they've waited for.
A wedding, a birth, a commemoration.
Something. For me, it will be lilacs, tons
of lilacs on a bush as big and giving as the one
in my grandmother's backyard 70 years ago,
hard against the back fence, competing
for space with an old-fashioned climbing
rose bush, and farther off, a Rose of
Sharon. I hated the Rose of Sharon. It
drew bees, and did nothing at all
of any use. I liked the roses.

But the lilacs. Last year, when we were in
France in the spring and away from my lilacs,
I made Simon climb down into a gully off a road
we often traveled and pick me the last two
blossoms on an abandoned bush. He didn't
want to; he felt it was stealing. I argued, told
him if anyone cared for the bush gone rogue,
they'd have come to pick the blossoms before
they mainly died. In the end, I prevailed.

But it wasn't pretty.

That's how much I love lilacs.


Copyright 2019, Laura Harrison McBride

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