FROM
THE LOVELY late Maying to this humming cloudless unfamiliar summer
heat, the Earth has been laughing in flowers. I have watched the
lanes and the hills and the riverbanks as they've blossomed in a
great rush of colour – one after the other after the other – a
froth of petalled joy spilling my heart over and calling, calling in
weedy green voices: a chlorophyll chorus, this time unignoreable.
Something
has happened this year. The plants have started calling louder than
ever before.
Those
of us who have loved the plants since childhood and dreamed of a
cronehood stalking the fields with a basket, kitchen windowsill a
stained glass apothecary of sunlight falling through bottles of
herb-infused oils and tinctures – a Church of Weeds – have heard
the hedgerows calling clearer and more insistent this year than ever
before. I wonder for how many of you the seasons' turning this year
moved something in you that had perhaps learnt over the years a
handful of plant names and their uses and maybe collected many books
on plant lore and craft, but not before with this new purpose and
dedication wanted to know the whole great encyclopedia of
leaves?
The
rushing of life into summer has been my church, and the green hands
of this land have pushed up and out and taken mine, a willing but
green apprentice, and they've begun to whisper things, now audible,
that I've been hearing and yet not hearing for many many years.
The
beauty of our Dartmoor hills stirs me every day. “We live
here!” we say to each other,
incredulous. On these hot hot days, we have swum in the cold
thrilling rivers, alive with leg-kissing fish and haloed with an aura
of insects. This land feels healthy and we fall endlessly,
unquenchably in love with it.
And
the plants go on calling. I feel a need to be able to name them,
which seems at once ridiculous – how can two Latin words given by an eighteenth century Swedish man equal the complex ancient magic of a
particular plant growing in a particular place? And yet somehow the
Latin name, an international and specific way of reference, becomes
helpful: It can tell us a story about humans' relationship with this
plant (St John's Wort – Hypericum perforatum – is
named for the midsummer saint who replaced the pagan sun magic with
which this plant is associated. The hyper-ikon
was a herb placed above the icon of St John attesting to its power
over ghosts or bad spirits – also known as depression – for which
the herb is most well known these days. Yarrow – Achillea
millefolium, an excellent wound
herb, which arrests bleeding and disinfects wounds, was
used according to legend by Achilles as a field dressing for his
soldiers' wounds during the Trojan war.) The Latin name of a plant
can tell us where that plant can be found growing (- palustris
– in marshes, - arvensis
– in fields, - sylvatica
– in woodlands), or whether it
was part of the folk medicine chests of old ( - officianalis).
Valerian - Valariana officianalis
– commonly called All-heal,
has significantly in
German-speaking countries been given over 500 distinct names, and by
the Romans was given feminine names, honouring the tall upright
white-flower-crowned grace and importance of the plant.
The
common names of plants conjure stranger, more wonderful uses and
stories, tying us to our hedgewalking forebears, and reminding us
how they knew the plants ~ wolf's
bane, wet-the-bed, jump-up-and-kiss-me, fireweed, bastard
killer, woundwort, sweethearts, sneezewort, simpler's joy,
mother-die, bedstraw, heartsease, devil's plaything, gypsy's baccy,
white man's footprints...
And
so I have continued to walk the lanes and to ask the plants and to
write down what they say in my book of the hedge. This writing has
been not only in words and names but in paint too. Out of this
ongoing hedgerow-thrall came a painting – Weed Wife –
an expression of my love for the wild plants in particular, the ones
who can thrive between pavement slabs and motorway sidings, the ones
who grow strong despite bad weather and trampling, and in whose green
veins thrum aeons of medicine for our bodies and spirits which we've
strimmed and poisoned and walked past for too long.
She
began in pencil on a beautiful heavy gnarly piece of burr oak. This
one had no preparatory sketches whatsoever; all that came before this
was the thought of a woman surrounded by plants: a Weed Wife.
And
slowly the weeds began to grow around her.
The
wood was an awkward shape to work on – too solid and unwieldy to
rest flat on a drawing board. And so I wedged it inside an old school
desk with its lid open.
The
painting began with the Weed Wife herself.
And
then the colours crept around her in tendrils of pigment
growing
a forest of weeds.
The
detail was small and required a meticulous brush, attempting to
achieve a good likeness in every plant portrait.
Finally
(just hours before the delivery deadline for the gallery!) she was
finished:
See
if you can find all the plants in the painting...
Weed Wife - prints available here |
Hogweed,
Goosegrass, Bramble, Lady's Mantle, Hedge Woundwort, Ground Ivy,
Mallow, Dandelion, Dock, Heartsease, Nettle, Hawthorn, Herb Bennett,
Elder, Ivy, Poppy, Shepherd's Purse, Plantain, Yarrow, Mullein,
Holly.
This
painting seems to have touched some gentle yet powerful part of many
women who have seen it, bringing tears to their eyes. I can't explain
why this might be because I don't really know, though I was very
moved to hear it had this effect. Some kind of plant-song must come
out of it, revivifying a deep and long-held womanly knowing.
The
weeds continue their lessons as the year burns on, catching the light
of every day in their green blood, in their thorns and hairs and petals, throwing me
riddles and conundrums, singing me songs, and I listen as best I can,
my ear still not fluent in the nuances of the language of their
country.
I
have begun to properly collect and dry plants found around and about
where I live (all of the close up photographs of plants in this post
were taken within a few yards of my home, and the rest within a few
miles). I feel that the plants sharing soil and water with me are
bound to have better medicine in them for me than some commercially
grown and packaged herb flown in from overseas ever could, not to
mention the extra and particular magic that will be inevitably mixed
into any brew I make based on the intentions and reverence I hold
whilst picking and preparing.
I've
fashioned a very rudimentary drying rack for a tiny house out of an
old crate, some strips of muslin, bits of bamboo and gaffer tape.
This hangs over our wood burner on the clothes drying rack in between
the towels and socks. One of these days I'll make a nicer version out
of willow but this works very well for now.
And
the dried plants are going into jars, for which I have yet to make
labels...
Three
plants flowering about our home at the moment combined to chase away
a cold that threatened to drag Tom under. I brewed up Elderflowers
and Yarrow (which both have excellent exterior-releasing qualities causing an illness-eliminating sweat) and Honeysuckle (which has
wonderful antiseptic and soothing properties). A few hot brews of
this with honey chased it away good and proper, and Tom awoke the
next morning free of the cold!
Some
years ago during my Book Arts studies, I made a book of plant lore –
a Herbal Alphabet with one plant for each letter, each one illustrated
by a woodcut illustration of a story surrounding the uses and
folklore of the plant. The text tells of botany, history, folklore,
superstition and medicine, and I bound the whole thing by hand. It
was a one-off creation, my love of Herbals and the plant knowledge
therein strong even then; and I find myself coming back to it now and
referring to it, finding information in it that I'd forgotten.
It
shares shelf space with many other excellent Herbal tomes, a few of which
you can see here:
A
small selection of plant books that have caught my imagination
recently or become oft-referred-to old favourites follow:
The Energetics of Western Herbs Vol 1 & 2 – A Materia Medica
Integrating Western and Chinese Herbal Therapeutics by
Peter Holmes
The Secret Teachings of Plants – The Intelligence of the Heart in
the Direct Perception of Nature by Stephen Harrod Buhner
Traveller's Joy by Beshlie
Wild Flowers of Britain by Roger Phillips
This
last book is by a true weed wife of whom many of you will know. Juliette de Baïracli Levy spent her life travelling and living with
the peasants and nomadic peoples of many countries, learning their
medicine. She raised her children and Afghan hounds according to what
she learnt along the way. Her life was a flourishing garden of
glowing health and a deep and simple love for the Earth. I was first
captivated by her ways after being given her book Traveller's Joy
by a friend at the Weird and Wonderful Wood Fair this year, but she
has written many, which are full with remedies for both humans and
animals, that you know she has used and perfected.
This beautiful hour-and-a-bit-long film about her life will beguile you utterly, I heartily recommend taking the time to watch it:
Meanwhile
the plants go on calling, and the small beautiful creatures who know the language of plants best of all answer in their miraculous iridescent orchestra of humming and
scraping and buzzing and weaving and tasting and pollinating and
egg-laying and cocooning and Keeping It All Going...
The Weed Wife original painting is on display at the Green Hill Arts Gallery in Moretonhampstead, Devon until 7th August and prints small and large can be purchased here.
Yesterday, down our lane, we found our beloved hedgerow massacred by brutal farm hedge-cutters which had hacked the whole living ecosystem back to a stubble of chewed stems and gouged banks. I found myself profoundly affected by this - heart-sad at the loss of specific plants I had come to know and love and watch grow day by day. I mourn their destruction and am left speechless at the way supposed "stewards of the land" can come at a tiny delicate rare variety of Imperforate St John's Wort which I'd found growing there a few days before with a huge indiscriminate cutting machine. I don't suppose the farmer even knew that little flower was there.
I will go on walking the hedges, listening to the plants, learning their names, telling them how I am glad that they live and thrive and trusting always in their ability to crack concrete.
stay together
learn the flowers
go light
~ from For the Children by Gary Snyder
So much beauty! I feel blessed by this lovely post, by your art, and the wild art of the place where you live. Thank you so much for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteYou put into words what was chasing my thoughts since the end of winter... yeah I feel it too, this year there is something in the plants which is calling ... for what, I am yet not sure...
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for this inspiring post! I've always been interested in herbs and wild flowers, but just recently found myself falling more and more in love with them. Partly because of my English herbalist, whose remedies have helped me a lot. I'm especially intrigued of the history and magick of the weeds and am trying to get more knowledge about it all. Not easy to find any books about the matter, at least here in Finland. If anyone knows something to recommend I'd be glad to know.
ReplyDeleteSuch a lovely post. I've enjoyed seeing your photographs and learning something more about the plants I see every day. Your Weed Wife painting is gorgeous and thank you for sharing the process :)
ReplyDeleteRima, your work is always so beautiful, but this one, oh this one, this Weed Wife she speaks to my soul. Particularly poignant for me is the yarrow in her hand.
ReplyDeleteA small story: when I moved to my home, the area was bare. I purchased two small seedling, no taller than 2" and gingerly planted them. That year (4 years ago now) they grey tall and mighty. I knew they spread and anxiously awaited the following year. I didn't anticipate what came next. Over the next years my garden has become absolutely a carpet of yarrow. Magnificent, right? Until I learned that I get quite the skin reaction to it. Noooooooooooooo! A weed wife allergic to her weeds.
Oh Rima, I know these feelings you speak of all to well. I am moved from across the ocean. Thank you.
Rima - Yes, and yes to all you have written here. And the weed wife, married to the plant world itself, is poignant and beautiful. I thought this quote might be particularly interesting to you:
ReplyDelete“When we know the name of something, it brings us closer to the ground. It takes the blur out of our mind; it connects us to the earth. If I walk down the street and see “dogwood,” and “forsythia,” I feel more friendly toward the environment. I am noticing what is around me and can name it. It makes me more awake.” Natalie Goldberg Writing Down the Bones
-Abby
http://travelingchariot.blogspot.com/search/label/The%20Great%20Outdoors
Thank you for sharing your thoughts with us Rima. I always feel blessed and uplifted by your words, and by your art - so very moving. Judith x
ReplyDeleteThis is such a beautiful painting,
ReplyDeleteI got goosebumps.
And you are as beautiful.
Feels so good looking at these pictures, I love it.
Herzliche Grüße
aus Kassel
Melanie
The comment before this one said it so well - I got goosebumps...
ReplyDeleteThat was such an inspired painting. Thank you for taking the time to lead us through your process. It was like we viewers were watching you holding our breath and then we collectively let out a gasp when we saw the final piece.
Somewhere I read that if your surroundings are beautiful, you know you are on the right path in your life. When I see the glorious photographs in this post, I feel blessed at knowing you through this blog.
Thank you so much! Your post is so inspiring and it's just what I need right now. Color!
ReplyDeleteRima, you are so right about the magic of the archetype of the wood-wise, herb-growing cottage witch (and I say "witch" meaning wise woman living close to the earth in tune with its cycles and powers and transformations). That calls to me strongly and it is so wonderful to see how you have listened to that voice and expressed it through your art and your life. I LOVE the story of healing Tom's cold with your herbal knowledge, love the herbal you created, love the lore you have passed along to us in this post and The Weed Wife fills me with joy. Thank you so much for generously sharing your beautiful life with us, and blessings to the plants in the hedgerows and cracks to thrive more strongly than ever.
ReplyDeleteRima, your exquisite word-smithing combined with your deep love of the green and growing ones, brings their medicine to the page; one can taste their offerings and feel your connection with them.
ReplyDeleteWeed Wife also brought tears to my eyes and a rush of shared sisterhood, an ancient knowing. As I walk through the wild woods and the meadows where I live, I too hear the whispers and wisdom of the ones growing there. Sometimes I follow the blessed bees into the centers of flowers, getting as close as I can to the alchemy and majesty of the petaled world.
You have such a beautiful way of putting into words the felt nuances of soul. Your paintbrush brings to life the old songs and stories and truths, in danger of being forgotten. Blessings and Gratitude dear sister, for the work you do and the wonder with which you do it.
This post is utterly fascinating - a delight for the soul as well as the eyes. I wish you success with the Weed Wife - she is so beautiful and the plant portraits are excellent. Your talent is amazing.
ReplyDeleteWonderful reading as always.
ReplyDeleteYour posts make me homesick, hopeful and tickle my spirit all at the same time.
When I read this lovely post for the second time I realised you reminded me of the girl in The Gift by Carol Ann Duffy and Rob Ryan. The next thing that immediately sprang to mind was the fabulous Italian Herbiary (I know it's not the correct term but I love the idea of a plant bestiary). We were shown a facsimile by a lovely lady we met in Edwinstowe. One of the very few hand illuminated scripts that were done from life studies and not the scribes imagination. I did wonder if you know it, but am damned if I can remember the book's title. I love the cherishing of old names for plants and the weed wife is such an eloquent picture. All the best to you and yours this fine summers season. C
ReplyDeleteSuch a wonderful post, and the picture too. My husband recently remarked to me that he had read that from prehistoric times, men and women had developed brains tuned to their particular skills. The writer said that men are best at seeing motion, in particular small movements at a distance. Women are more skilled at identifying and separating plant life, so that hey could forage for the food and medicines around them. That made sense to me, and your whole weed wife here echoes that as well. I believe your woman and the delightful plants echo deep in our primitive-deep brains and speak to our deepest thoughts. Well done, thank you for expressing what most of us can only fleetingly feel.
ReplyDeleteOh Rima. Thank you. Just, thank you. She gives me chills and tears and a lurch deep in my soul, your Weed Wife. Thank you for all this beauty and old wildness you share. It is a great gift! And it is very strange and magic, the plants calling this year! My house is too small for all the scrabby bits of nettle and yarrow and elderflower I have tucked about, in less order I daresay than yours, and the cupboards are getting stuffed with various tinctures. I wonder what's going on... it's time I suppose, that's what they are saying, come on already. Cheers to the old crone lady I've always dreamed of becoming, as have many I know-- with her basket of herbs, her stories, her bare feet dusty and strong in the summer evening, on the porch singing. So much love to you, xxx S
ReplyDeleteP.S. I just realized that the Weed Wife is of course a goddess and a madonna, an icon, with wise and ancient eyes. She is us, isn't she?
ReplyDeleteRima, dear, your Weed Wife is beautiful & you are beautiful. I've been swimming in rivers here, too. Very cold ones :]
ReplyDeleteI loved this post. Thank you, thank you x
Your world always seems so magical.
ReplyDeleteYour posts seem to have me more drawn into them with each one I read.
ReplyDeleteHi, the weed wife is so magical!! Painted so beautifully.I am also called to the plants and have studied herbologie for many years.Julliet is a very special person, I was honored to have met at an herb conference a few years ago, the movie is wonderful. Your posts are so magical. A couple books you might like are by Rosemary Gladstar, and Susan Weed two wonderful herbalists here in the U.S. and close friends of Julliet. Sweet summer too you!!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your knowledge with us! I also very much appreciate you sharing the video on Juliette de Baïracli Levy. It was wonderful and inspirational! Shalom!
ReplyDeleteRima, It's so wonderful to read your words, I love the weed woman! This post makes me feel as though we have known each other a long, long time. Keep tending the garden. You are WONDERFUL!!!
ReplyDeleteRima, you are such an inspirational soul. I am one of the women who got tears in her eyes seeing this, and I feel so grateful for you and your talents. THANK YOU!
ReplyDeleteThis post is heartbreakingly beautiful! But uplifting too, Like you I feel that the hedgerows and all who live in them have sung out louder to us this year than ever in our lifetimes. It feels urgent that we acknowledge this life force. Your photographs are stunning and so alive. I love your words and the Weed Wife. I miss Devon, thank you for sharing. xxxx
ReplyDeleteHi Rima, enjoying the pictures as always and the weaving of thoughts and words. We have just received a magnificent book you might enjoy should you come across it, "letting in the wild edges" by Glennie Kindred. Keep on roaming and sharing. We will continue to enjoy the wild lands of Scotland and the little views of your southern places too (I know the distress of the machine slashers too, we are hand tool people and like to "speak" with the plants before we cut them) Fuggo and Geoff
ReplyDeleteYES!
ReplyDeleteRima, (sigh)... 1st it was chils and then tears. I wasn´t surprised (yet, I was) when I read just bellow that other women had the same reaction to your painting. I also am attracted by plants, its names and its many uses... and since I live near nature and as I grew up I feel that in a more strong way...
ReplyDeleteYou really live in a magical and such beautiful place, you are blessed by that land... I know.
Thank you for keeping sharing with us that place, your art, your eyes, your surrounding nature.
love
joana
I always love your posts and your art. This speaks to me very well, I use essential oils and flower essences -you can hear them speaking too. I'm sure the earth provides everything to cure, if only we all listened more. Your herbal book is absolutely beautiful. Thank you Rima. Blessings. X
ReplyDeleteThis makes me so happy, not just because of the plants/herbs (which I adore), but because your Weed Wife looks like she could be me! ♥♥♥ I will definitely be buying a print. Thank you, Rima, for this gorgeous creation.
ReplyDeleteI am always fascinated by the way you work and how you are so very true to yourself.
ReplyDeleteI can relate to the hedge cutting as it happens around here all the time, even worse three fields full of meadow flowers, ground nesting birds, shrews, toads, snakes etc sprayed to detroy all the flowering plants for no earthly reason other than the farmer wants to sell the land for building.
Lovely post Rima... I too feel that same heavy heart when I see the countryside destroyed with such carelessness. Thank you in particular for sharing the link to Juliette of the Herbs... we watched it in our van the other night and were utterly captured. If ever a way of life, sentiments and feelings could mirror my own heart, then it is those found in this film. I am now off to find some of her books... I cannot thank you enough for bringing her to my attention because it has helped to centre my thoughts about our current journey. Hope you are well.
ReplyDeleteI'm amazed and - blessed - reading your post. Yarrow, hairy honeysuckle, Mexican elderberry - these grow natively on the Central California Coast where I live (and blog on native plants etc with a friend). Your weed woman does touch me too. Thank you so much for sharing your love of the nature around you - here I am more and more immersing myself in the place I'm amazed to call home - and beginning to learn a little of the native American ways with the local plants - so much to relate to what you have written and beautifully illustrated with painting and photographs. So sorry about your hedgehog. That too I can relate to - the brutal hedge trimming - along the single track road to our home also the workers slashed back, no leopard lily this year for us. But disturbing the soil - it can be good for the life within it. Suggest you read Kat Anderson - Tending the Wild, about native Californian ways of land management. I feel so lucky to have come across your blog - thanks thanks thanks.
ReplyDeleteA heartfelt thanks. My heart is shot through with green.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful post. The greenworld always calls to me, and this painting...it's just beautiful. I think you've touched on a bit of many people's hearts.
ReplyDeleteMaggie
I was touched by this post too, you really see the beauty that is all around and thanks for capturing it. The Weed Wife is such a strong intricate image, it has stayed with me and I am coming back to post as you inspired me to pick and dry some camomile today which is the only herb I dried last year and I so needed it ... as I had a few bouts of not sleeping it was so calming! The plants are really calling out to us... a friend gave me the Flower Spirit cards from Melanie Eclare last year and I feel more in tune with plant messages.
ReplyDeleteVery excited to have found your beautiful site via Re-enchanting the Earth. Your art is brilliant, and a great post on the weed wife. I got married to plants a long time ago, but still want to get closer to them and learn more of their stories. It's a wonderful marriage!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! I love The Weed Wife. x
ReplyDeleteRima - you are inspirational. Wonderful, wonderful words and pictures. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI've followed your blog for a while now, as a city-dweller it provides me with a much needed countryside fix!
ReplyDeleteA couple of weeks ago I decided to treat myself to one of your prints... I am now the very happy owner of a Weed Wife, and how beautiful she is too!
Thank you for your words and pictures, they truly gladden my city-locked heart
Lovely post and painting, Rima! Your writing took me back to my childhood wanderings amongst the spring-blooming weeds.
ReplyDeleteWow. What a truly beautiful, beautiful blog! Thank you so much for sharing :)
ReplyDeleteYou are truly an exceptional artists.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad to have read your post here. I've felt the urgency this year, too. Your Weed Wife painting is very lovely.
ReplyDelete