d871fe1
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On the night that she'd been brought here she'd had the idea that the abbey was closed in by trees. Now she could see that a little green stood on the other side of the gravel drive. Yellow flowers were in bloom here as well- a veritable carpet of them. She walked across the drive, heading toward the flowers. Daffodils. They were daffodils, thousands of them. Iris knelt in the grass and inhaled the faint perfume. A breeze passed by and all the bright-yellow trumpets nodded as one. How could this be? Had someone patiently planted each bulb? But no. The daffodils weren't in soldierly rows. They bloomed in drifts and clumps. They must be wild. She drew in her breath in wonder. How amazing that such beautiful ephemeral things could bloom here in this house of death and decay. But perhaps she was wrong. Perhaps the abbey wasn't dying. Perhaps it merely waited, sleeping, for joy and life to return to it.
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iris-de-chartres
daffodils
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Elizabeth Hoyt |
9d31bc0
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It was spring and they stood on the banks of the small river that ran beside the ruins of the old cathedral at Dyemore Abbey. The stone arch rose into a clear, blue sky and below, the scattered stones that had once made up the cathedral were carpeted with yellow. Hundreds of thousands of daffodils, wild in this part of England, had taken over the old ruins and made a home for themselves. The view was gorgeous. The daffodils rolled in a yellow-dotted wave right up to the stream itself and splashed over onto the opposite bank, disappearing into the little wood there.
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daffodils
wild-nature
ruins
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Elizabeth Hoyt |