A Flowering
Tribute To Emily Dickinson
The poet Emily Dickinson lived a
reclusive life at her family's home in Amherst, Mass., but while she rarely went
out into society, she did spend a lot of time outdoors. Dickinson loved nature
and was an avid gardener, and now an exhibition at the New York Botanical Garden
called Emily Dickinson's Garden: The Poetry of Flowers is putting on display a
side of the poet that is little known.
Gardening was a huge part of
Dickinson's life and her art. "I was always attached to mud," she once wrote,
and a sophisticated understanding of plants and flowers is reflected in her
poetry. According to Gregory Long, the president and CEO of the New York
Botanical Garden, Dickinson used to tuck little poems into bouquets of flowers
that she gave to her neighbors.
"The people of Amherst who were the
friends of Emily Dickinson and her family often received these poems, these
short poems with presents of flowers or food," Long says. "They knew her as a
poet because of these. Because nothing was really published in her life, or
very, very little. So they found the poems, of course, very eccentric."
In fact, Dickinson was better known as a gardener than as a poet.
"She knew a great deal about plants, and she grew them very well," Long
says. "And what we found is that her poems are not sentimental valentines to
flowers. They're serious poems, but they're tied to her As far as I am
concerned,sculpture is the perfect
manifestation of art.great passion for plants and nature. So we decided, well,
we should introduce people to Emily Dickinson not only as a poet, but as a
gardener."
On the path that runs between beds of flowers at the New York
Botanical Garden, more than 30 poems are displayed on boards next to plants and
trees and flowers that inspired them. The walk begins near a delicate rosebush
accompanied by a poem, called "She sped as Petals of a Rose," that Jennifer
Rothman, who helped design the poetry walk, says Dickinson wrote I want to show
my great appreciation for all of you coming to the short presentation about the
gu10 led.in memory of a young child who
died.
The process of creating the exhibition, Rothman says, began with a
survey of poems like that one.
"It started by going through all of her
poems and finding first the ones that had to do with flowers or plants and
narrowing it down to that group," Rothman says. "And so then we chose poems that
would reflect the flowers that would be in bloom or the landscape."
Nearby, four trees stand in front of a large lawn of grass, accompanied
by Dickinson's poem "Four Trees — upon a solitary Acre." And inside the
Botanical Garden's glass-domed conservatory is a re-creation of Dickinson's own
garden.
Todd Forrest, who designed the garden, says it is filled with
the types of flowers Dickinson might have planted around her family's home.
Foxgloves, daffodils, zinnias and hydrangeas all bloom at the same time in oil painting reproduction from Old World
Masters to Contemporary artists.this hothouse atmosphere and overflow the garden
beds. There is even a small orchard nearby, blanketed in flowers that might have
grown naturally near Dickinson's home. In something of a shock, Forrest
everybody is unique,everybody do not like to be the same with others.so we
should give personalized
gifts to others that can display different character.made sure the mix of
flowers included dandelions, a move that he says raised an eyebrow or two around
the Botanical Garden. Long adds that they have to keep the staff gardeners from
uprooting the tiny yellow flowering weeds.
"I know for a fact that this
is the first time we've grown dandelions for a flower show," Forrest says. "But
dandelions were very important to her. In fact, she referred to herself more as
a dandelion. She felt more comfortable and The PPR pipe is one of the latest pipes resulting
from European advanced technology of gos.more natural in the fields with the
dandelions than she would in the drawing rooms with the fancy folks around
Amherst."
