Almost fourteen years ago a friend gave us two anonymous bulbs about the size and color of a Bosc pear. I planted them in the front garden between the pine and the lantana and waited. One disappeared, never to bloom. The other, like crocuses in the North, is our reliable harbinger of spring:
It’s an amaryllis, with a blossom
the color of a pomegranate. The name derives from a shepherdess in Virgil’s Eclogues,
from the Greek amarysso, “to sparkle,” though my first thought is always
of Marian the Librarian’s instructions to her piano student in The Music Man:
“Now don’t dawdle, Amaryllis.” At a more elevated level I remember Milton’s
lines in “Lycidas”:
“To sport with Amaryllis
in the shade
Or with the tangles
Neaera’s hair?”
So each year around this
time I read Milton’s poem again, just as I reread the Christmas chapters in Pickwick
Papers each December and the description of a seder in Isaac Rosenfeld’s
novel Passage from Home (1946) around Passover. I confess I don’t much care
for the color of the flower. It’s too emphatic, almost gaudy. I’m more of a
pastel partisan. What I admire is the flower’s reliability, self-reliance (no
human care required) and simplicity of design: two leaves, stem, flower. More
recently I found a reference to the flower in Tennyson’s “The Daisy,” set in Italy:
“What slender campanili
grew
By bays, the peacock’s
neck in hue;
Where, here and there, on
sandy beaches
A milky-bell’d amaryllis blew.”

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