THE WINTER GARDEN (LISTENING IN THE SNOW)
I may not have "a mind of winter,” like the snow man in Wallace Stevens' poem of the same name, but it
does occur to me that winter is a season of the spirit at least as much as it
is a season in the landscape. Traveler’s
Joy,* S.C., has never been gripped by the kind of extreme winter weather that visits
northern parts of the country, or not for long at any rate. However, the inland parts of the upper south
are certainly familiar with freezing cold, ice, snow, and the gradual
stripping-away of color and density in the environment that accompanies
shortened days and weakened light. I
have come to welcome this process as a necessary respite for the heart, the
mind, and the senses. It is an
opportunity to disengage from the subjective world and try to be “the listener, who listens in the snow/And,
nothing himself, beholds/Nothing that is not there and the nothing that is.”
Traveler's Joy* in winter |
Snowmen aren’t the only ones
privileged to experience this paradoxical reality; gardeners know that the “nothing that is not there and the nothing
that is” describes our mid-winter gardens, where the ground that looks
colorless and bare to the uninitiated is, to us, rich with the promise of the tender leaves,
fragrant flowers and ripening fruit that will emerge from the earth as the calendar inches forward.
Once we can be free of the festive confinement imposed by Christmas
traditions and have packed the last glittering ornament off to the attic, you
will find us wandering among our bleak, frost-blasted beds and borders with the
preoccupied air of mystics. We are
dreaming, planning, thinking, hoping. We
are waiting, with a patience born of familiarity with the natural world. We don’t dare to predict, but we have
definitely learned to trust.
Wintersweet |
Edgeworthia |
Thank goodness for the hellebores
(Lenten roses) which are tough as nails and bloom as soon as December, in some
years. I sprinkle a bit of granular
organic food on them at Thanksgiving if I remember, and when there’s time I try
to snip off the spent leaf stalks, but the porcelain cups of white, rose and
purple bloom robustly in spite of neglect. Because the plants are low to the ground and
the blossoms dangle, it’s difficult to see and appreciate the beautiful
interior traceries of the sepals and the nectaries that resemble tiny chandeliers. For this
reason I made sure to transplant several types to the bed atop our new
retaining wall, the area shaded by the giant pecan. In this way I can appreciate the flowers
whenever I’m in the lower garden.
Hellebore |
I sited one of my favorite cultivars
in this shady bed, a hybrid called ‘Ivory Prince.’ These were hard to find when they first came
out in the trade a few years ago, and I paid what I considered at the time to
be an unhealthy sum for a one-gallon plant: $24. If I’d only been able to delay gratification,
I could have waited a couple of seasons and then picked up a ‘prince’ at the
big box store for half the price.
A healthy specimen of Helleborus ‘Ivory Prince’ is a beautiful
sight, and it should be, considering how many crosses were required to produce it in that
specialized (and passionate) world of hellebore enthusiasts. A British grower named David
Tristram crossed a seedling of the spectacular Christmas rose cultivar, Helleborus niger ‘Potter’s Wheel,’ with
another grower’s hybrid, H. x ericsmithii
(you can guess the name of that hybridizer), which was a cross of H. sternii and H. niger. ‘Potter’s Wheel’
contributed its large, cream-white flowers and sturdy stems to the resulting
plant, which also featured H. x ericsmithii’s
captivating blue foliage. I once tried
to grow a H. x sternii
cultivar named ‘Boughton Beauty’ (which also cost too much). Its notched silver-blue
foliage was irresistible, but that and the shimmering chocolate-y tone of the outer sepals should have tipped me off that this 'beauty' was too
rare for the real world. I planted it,
blinked, and it was gone. Not just dead,
but gone – the dessicated remnants of its unearthly flowers and foliage littering
the ground where the spirit had departed for more ethereal climes.
H. ‘Ivory
Prince’ is much better equipped for reality, so long as it’s sited in
well-drained, humus-rich soil, and has a good deal of light shade. It may not be a prima donna, but it still
manages to be a stunner, with notched, teal-blue leaves revealing creamy flower-bells set on sturdy, chocolate-colored stems. The buds are dark mauve, and are held very
close to the crowns.
For serious hellebore-lovers, the
best book I know of is Hellebores; a Comprehensive Guide, by the
Virginia-based garden writer C. Colston Burrell and hellebore grower Judith
Knott Tyler, of Pine Knot Farms in VA.
My husband FK was kind enough to put this definitive tome under the
Christmas tree for me a couple of years ago, and I am still working my way through it, with great pleasure.
Hellebores. Daphne. Wintersweet. Fatsia. The names of these winter headliners roll off the tongue like poetry. They are enough to satisfy me until the bulbs push their noses above ground, with some, like the early narcissus N. ‘February Gold’ and the turquoise leaves of the lady tulips already emerging, despite nighttime temps in the twenties. As soon as I’m able to look out my window in the morning and see the candy-striped buds of Tulipa clusiana ‘Lady Jane’ nodding in the frosty light, I will know that spring is finally here. And the snowman has melted.
Hellebores. Daphne. Wintersweet. Fatsia. The names of these winter headliners roll off the tongue like poetry. They are enough to satisfy me until the bulbs push their noses above ground, with some, like the early narcissus N. ‘February Gold’ and the turquoise leaves of the lady tulips already emerging, despite nighttime temps in the twenties. As soon as I’m able to look out my window in the morning and see the candy-striped buds of Tulipa clusiana ‘Lady Jane’ nodding in the frosty light, I will know that spring is finally here. And the snowman has melted.
Lady Jane tulip |
***
Here is Wallace Stevens’ poem in its entirety:
One must have a mind of winter
To regard the frost and the boughs
Of the pine-trees crusted with snow;
And have been cold a long time
To behold the junipers shagged with ice,
The spruces rough in the distant glitter
Of the January sun; and not to think
Of any misery in the sound of the wind,
In the sound of a few leaves,
Which is the sound of the land
Full of the same wind
That is blowing in the same bare place
For the listener, who listens in the snow,
And, nothing himself, beholds
Nothing that is not there and the nothing that is.
To regard the frost and the boughs
Of the pine-trees crusted with snow;
And have been cold a long time
To behold the junipers shagged with ice,
The spruces rough in the distant glitter
Of the January sun; and not to think
Of any misery in the sound of the wind,
In the sound of a few leaves,
Which is the sound of the land
Full of the same wind
That is blowing in the same bare place
For the listener, who listens in the snow,
And, nothing himself, beholds
Nothing that is not there and the nothing that is.
Work Cited:
Burrell, C. Colston & Tyler, Judith Knott. Hellebores;
a Comprehensive Guide. Portland, OR:
Timber Press, 2006. Print.
Stevens, Wallace. “The
Snow Man.” Twentieth-Century American
Poetry. Ed. Dana Gioia, David Mason,
Meg Schoerke. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004. 121-22. Print.