One of my annual jobs as a boy, self-assigned, was tending the portulaca that grew along both sides of the driveway -- hundreds of plants in narrow plots flanking the gravel. In the fall I harvested the black seeds, each a little larger than a salt crystal. It took several days, plucking the pods and rolling them between my fingers so the seeds fell into one of my father’s empty pipe tobacco cans. There was always a bumper crop. The following spring, once the snow had passed, I reversed the process and sowed the seeds.
To this day I enjoy some of
the jobs – those with satisfyingly identifiable beginnings and ends -- that others deem
tedious. I’m reassured by the completion of projects. The only person who paid attention to my portulacas was the old, red-haired German widow, Elsie
Becker, who lived next door. She occupied two lots, one of which was an ambitious
vegetable garden surrounded, European-style, by flowers. At the center was a peach tree that reliably produced fruit, which she shared with the
neighborhood kids. She was a library of folklore and plant lore. I thought of my
portulacas and Frau Becker when rereading “The Sweet Peas” (Toward the
Winter Solstice, 2006) by Timothy Steele:
“The season for sweet peas
had long since passed,
And the white wall was
bare where they’d been massed;
Yet when that night our
neighbor phoned to say
That she had watched them
from her bed that day,
I didn’t contradict her:
it was plain
She struggled with the
tumor in her brain
And, though confused and
dying, wished to own
How much she’d liked the
flowers I had grown,--
And when she said, in
bidding me good night,
She thought their colors
now were at their height --
Indeed, they never had
looked lovelier --
The only kind response was
to concur.
“Thereafter, as a kind of
rite or rule,
Each autumn when the days
turned damp and cool,
I’d sow peas gathered from
the last year’s pods.
I’d watch as young plants,
bucking storms and odds,
Mounted the net and buds
appeared on stems
While, using
self-supporting stratagems,
Fine tendrils twined in
mid-air, each to each,
Or to the mesh of screens
within their reach
Until the vines and
blossoms waved aloof
Of net and eaves in full
view of the roof,
As if reporting, situated
so,
News of the heavens to the
yard below.
“And I’d recall her, who
had loved their scent,
But who, in spite of my
encouragement,
Was shy of picking them
until I said
They flowered the more
that they were harvested.
(Red blooms came earliest,
and, when they’d peaked,
The purples followed, and
the salmon-streaked;
All equally attracted moth
and bee.)
Meanwhile, her phone call
gathered irony:
If, at the end, she’d
summoned back somehow
Those vanished sweet peas,
their descendants now
Returned the favor, having
been imbued
With her departed grace
and gratitude.
“When blossoms -- each
with banner, wings, and keel --
Stir in the warmth above
me while I kneel
And weed around the bottom
of the plants,
I sometimes think that, if
they had the chance,
They’d sail off after
passing bird or cloud.
I sometimes hope that, if
it was allowed,
She felt within her what
she loved when she
Passed from this to that
other mystery
And kept, by way of
comfort, as she went,
The urge to complication
and ascent
Which prints such vivid
signatures on air
That they are read when
they’re no longer there.”
It was Frau Becker who
taught me that portulaca is also known as purslane, which is grown as a
salad vegetable. The English gardener and diarist John Evelyn translated
The Compleat Gard’ner (1693) from the French of Jean de La Quintinie. In it he writes: “Purslain is one of the prettiest Plants in a Kitchen-garden, which is principally used in Sallets, and sometimes in Pottages.”
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