Wednesday, October 23, 2013

The chic elegance and sophistication of marigolds, beloved of the Virgin,their eclat, their unrestrained colors, their militant aspirations, their bitter altercations, their undeniable beauty and ruinous pride.



Author's program note. I noticed them right away, of course. I would. There they  were, a startling and astonishing range of oranges, from burnt to bright, from  brilliant to bombastic, each alluring.

 There was nothing shy or hesitant about their presentation. They stood in pristine  glory before the world with adamant certainty, sure that they would be  noticed,  scrutinized, and inevitably complimented, extolled and desired, found wanting  in absolutely nothing.

 These were the marigolds, lordly flowers indeed, perfection in any bed or border  even when, as here on Waterhouse Street, they had too little space in which to  arrange themselves to their strict, precise standards, impeccable,  daunting for  others, so seemingly effortless for them.

 At last.

 So, the Christian Science church's caretaker had at last taken my advice and bought  a box of these confident flowers... like so many aristocratic ladies in bespoke perfection  posing for the world, sure in every manicured leaf that they were worth your sustained  glance and admiration. That caretaker should have taken my advice earlier, for these  extremely self-assured marigolds were certainly to the manner born. I stepped closer,  bowing low to get a better look.

 The flower bed was instantly on the qui vivre, for what I meant as nothing more than  curiosity, well-bred courtesy, an act of exquisite politesse and gentility, was at once  misinterpreted by the recipients as expected deference and complete adherence, a  partisan... but to whom? About what?

 For now there was pronounced agitation as what had first appeared to be  uniform  gave way to unmistakable faction, turmoil and agitation; what had just a moment ago  been serene and calm was now anything but.

 Petal pandemonium.

 The bed writhed with purposeful activity, as every loyal flower marched to its assigned  station, this moment anticipated, planned for, rehearsed, now executed.  It was a  scene of breathtaking awe... and terrible purpose. The brigades of Tagetes Patula  massed for their high and dire business. Every heart beat fast... the marigolds were  surging now, their colors all unfurled, each row in perfect cadence and array.

 There were tears, of course, how could there not be as kith, kin, friends and neighbors  would be uprooted, perishing along the way, desiccated, withered, radiant no longer,  the more honored, precious withal; jolting evidence of what success entails  ... but  above all there was pride, pulsating, uplifting, the flower of the flower of the Virgin.

 And so the French marigolds, showy, thrilling, sublime, riveting every eye, marched  forward, forward, forward... nothing more perfect and precise ever seen... nothing more  perfect and precise ever desired, the notes of their eerie chant de guerre "Marigold"  (released by Nirvana in 1993 and found in every search engine) floating in the crisp  air of perfect autumn...

 "He's scared 'cause I warned/ He's there in case I want it all/  He's scared 'cause I won."

 Then the celebrated "Six color pictures all in a row/ Of a marigold", pictures  sung about but never shown to or seen by the unworthy and unregenerate.

 Written in 1992 by American rock musician Dave Grohl, it was the only song  released by Nirvana not to include any contribution from frontman Kurt Cobain  (1967-1994). He had demons enough of his own already, and they were already  savoring the fast-evolving catastrophe; "He's there in case I wandered off". He  would need marigolds and the Virgin's comforting touch... but not yet.

 Quo vadis?

 And so the ranks of awe-inspiring marigolds, this time of the French variety,  impressed, dazzled, and caused every life of whatever kind to stop, watch,  and be glad that such a host of puissant warriors was not on this day marching  towards them... determined to achieve this mission, as they have achieved  every such mission down the ages (or so they say, believe and propagate), no  matter the foe, its size, or their numberless ranks.

 The marigolds, you see, are not what you once thought and often said upon seeing  them in the verdant park of some great chateau, "Oh, the little darlings!"; thereby  insulting them and exposing your own expansive ignorance They were neither little  nor darlings... thus making yours a mind and opinion they meant irrevocably to change  this very day, in a shower of their flashy panache.

 Thus they annexed terra firma, inch by inch, until the wide world awoke to  their astonishing presence and what might happen by overlooking Nature's  "little darlings"' and misunderstanding them so.

 And so the marigolds, tireless, determined, resolute, recognizing no obstacle as  even remotely powerful or sufficient to delay their adamant purpose marched on  and on, their chant de guerre known to all and everywhere... for the marigolds  carried nirvana in their stylish kits, never a petal or a stem out of place, certain of  who they were, where they were going, what they must do and the ineluctable  victory and supreme achievement which must be theirs and for all to praise and  forever remember.

 "Welcome to Calendula."

 Then there it was... a giant billboard with this adamant declaration, "Welcome  to Calendula, home of the REAL Marigold. Accept NO substitutions" and a  picture  of the Virgin holding a sprig of Calendula Arvensis, the field marigold; a flower  that looked like a daisy, not at all like the brilliant, ostentatious French marigolds,  their elegant uniforms a la mode designed on the Rue de la Paix.

 These swaggering flowers were now arrayed in their thousands before the great  fields where Calendula Officinalis held sway; the rich flower from which a staggering  number of renowned herbal and cosmetic products named "calendula" (from the Latin,  meaning "little calendar") inevitably derive, each balm to a troubled world; a world  which cannot get enough of this plant, its soothing properties, its gift for uplifting,  refreshing and reviving.

 This is what the world needs; this is what they give the world, all welcome, no one  ever turned away, an unequalled place of empathy, of kindness, of unstinting care,  of tranqulity and unconditional love... except for Tagetes Patula. Tagetes! Their  unqualified Nemesis! Tagetes! Usurper of the very word marigold!

 Tagetes! Insolent! Condescending! A by-word for arrogance! Hubris! Unceasing  disdain! Their greatest and most tenacious foe...  their own cousin, close related,  their very similarity augmenting, fermenting their abiding  contempt for each other. 

 "Hear this, O World. I am the REAL marigold, the one true marigold!" 

 Thus did two great and unreconcilable hosts stand before each other on the plains  of destiny, malice on their minds, mayhem at the ready. "Attention!," said the  resplendent Tagetes officer, his golden epaulettes shining. "Eyes forward!", shouted  his Calendula counterpart. Then both together, "March! Forward march! Engage!  Engage!"

 So in their thousands and their tens of thousands did the magnificent marigolds  move against each other, no parley, no compromise, no moderation possible, risking  absolutely everything for just one word.

 The morning after.

 "Father, father. Look what I have found! I found them at the top of the hill, all  uprooted, their stems cut, leaves covered with dirt. I didn't steal them, I promise.  They are so beautiful."

 The father knew where they had come from and why they were there. "I know you  didn't, son. We shall take these flowers with us to Ganga Ma, Mother Ganges for  each must be cleansed in the perpetual waters beyond time, for even flowers, things  of sacred life and destiny, must have their sins washed away and go pristine into the  great forever."

 Thus as the sun rose, they chanted together "Ganga Mata Ki Jai!" --"Victory to Mother  Ganges!" -- whilst they threw the marigolds into the timeless waters and watched their  unmatched splendor drift away in the muddy eddies, enriched by the ashes of the  faithful and chips of their bones, their undimmed radiance accompanying the dead on  their final journey, amrita, nectar of immortality.     Dedication.

 For Earth maven Patrice Porter, a woman of great heart and tenacious spirit. Here is  your inspiration... build your burgeoning empire upon it, helping all. >From your friend,  the author.


About the Author Harvard-educated Dr. Jeffrey Lant is the author of over a dozen print books, several ebooks, and over one thousand online articles. Republished with author's permission by Ruthsella Corasol http://WorkingAtHome101.com.

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