TIPTOE THROUGH THE GARDEN OF CYCLAMEN


Book Description

The contents of Tiptoe Through the Garden of Cyclamen traverse the intricacies of human emotion and thought, enveloped in a lexicon of arcane profundities and esoteric metaphors. My intent is not to mollify, but to challenge the conventional paradigms of interpretation. Any resemblance to real persons, living or deceased, is purely coincidental and emerges solely from the reader's own volitional projections. The complex symbolism and abstruse language may evoke varied interpretations; thus, I disclaim all responsibility for subjective inferences or psychological reverberations. This collection, while personal, transcends the individual, offering a universal exploration of existence, beauty, sorrow, and the ineffable. Approach this garden of cyclamen with love and excitement, for its blossoms may hold both the fragrance of hope and the thorns of despair.




The Garden


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An English Garden in Provence


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At a young age Natasha Spender came into contact with the renowned gardens of such literary figures as Virginia and Leonard Woolf, Harold Nicolson, Vita Sackville-West, and Michael Astor. In the 1960s she and her husband, the poet Sir Stephen Spender, acquired the ruins of a farmhouse enclosed in the dramatic skyline of the Alpilles. After years of hard work the result was a unique garden. Lady Spender’s gardening friendships with the locals and neighbors, the regular and inspiring visits of friends such as John Bayley and Iris Murdoch, Francis Bacon, and the Annans, her explorations of the surrounding landscape, and passages from Stephen Spender’s unpublished journals, all contribute to this enchanting book. It is both a record of the creation of a beautiful garden in the arid hills of Provence, and a treasure trove for devoted gardeners.




Blackwood's Magazine


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The Garden


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The Washingtonian


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Garden Life


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R. U. R.


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The Iris Family


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Irises and their relatives are lily-like plants related to the orchid and narcissus families, with whom they share a propensity for large, brightly colored, attractive flowers. Many have longlasting flowersÑIris, Gladiolus, and Freesia are among the most important cut-flower crops in the world. The intricate flowers of the iris family are finely adapted for pollination by a variety of animals, including hummingbirds, sunbirds, beetles, butterflies, moths, wasps, and bees. This intimate connection between flower form and pollination biology reveals how the marvelous range of flower colors, shapes, and scents are vital to the lives of the species. The diversity of Iridaceae is illustrated in more than 200 superb photographs supplemented by expert line drawings. A lifetime of work by the world's expert on Iridaceae is distilled in this definitive account. Botanists, ecologists, naturalists, and gardeners will find this an essential reference.




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