The Bowl of Roses

The Bowl of Roses: Peach colored David Austin rose in Manito Park, Spokane, Washington by Betsey Crawford

After my brother’s death in June, 2020, words were hard to come by, for writing, speaking, even reading. Poetry was a companion; so much meaning in so few words. And on those bright, blooming California days, the tender mercies of beauty were deeply consoling.

Perry had started his landscaping business in college, spending his life making the world more beautiful. He told me, while he could still contemplate such things, how profoundly grateful he was for this.

My daily life took me past a garden where the quintessential June flower — roses — were blooming in profusion. Their intricate, soft voluptuousness always reminds me of Rainer Maria Rilke’s poem The Bowl of Roses. They are some of the most luscious words ever strung together.

For this post, I am floating on those line. I’ve coupled them with photos of roses from the gorgeous Rose Hill in Spokane, Washington’s Manito Gardens.

Bowl of Roses: Yellow and pink rose in Manito Park, Spokane, Washington by Betsey Crawford

The Bowl of Roses

Rainer Maria Rilke

You saw angry ones flare, saw two boys
clump themselves together into a something
that was pure hate, thrashing in the dirt
like an animal set upon by bees;
actors, piled up exaggerators,
careening horses crashed to the ground,
their gaze thrown away, baring their teeth
as if the skull peeled itself out through the mouth.

Bowl of Roses: Three gorgeous David Austin roses in Manito Park, Spokane, Washington by Betsey Crawford

But now you know how these things are forgotten:
for here before you stands a bowl full of roses,
which is unforgettable and filled up
with ultimate instances
of being and bowing down,
of offering themselves, of being unable to give, of standing there
almost as part of us: ultimates for us too.

Beauty: David Austin roses in Manito Park, Spokane, Washington by Betsey Crawford

Noiseless life, opening without end,
filling space without taking any away
from the space the other things in it diminish,
almost without an outline, like something omitted,
and pure inwardness, with so much curious softness,
shining into itself, right up to the rim:
is anything as known to us as this?

Bowl of Roses: Peach David Austin rose in Manito Park, Spokane, Washington by Betsey Crawford

And this: that a feeling arises
because petals are being touched by petals?
And this: that one opens itself, like a lid,
and beneath lies nothing but eyelids,
all closed, as if tenfold sleep
had to dampen down an inner power to see.
And, above all, this: that through the petals
light has to pass. Slowly they filter out from a
thousand skies the drop of darkness
in whose fiery glow the jumbled bundle
of stamens becomes aroused and rears up.

And what activity, look, in the roses:
gestures with angles of deflection so small
one wouldn’t see them if not for
infinite space where their rays can diverge.

Yellow David Austin roses in Manito Park, Spokane, Washington by Betsey Crawford

See this white one, blissfully opened,
standing among its huge spreading petals
like a Venus standing in her shell;
and how this one, the blushing one, turns,
as if confused, toward the cooler one,
and how the cooler one, impassive, draws back,
and the cold one stands tightly wrapped in itself
among these opened ones, that shed everything.
And what they shed, how it can be
at once light and heavy. a cloak. a burden,
a wing, and a mask, it all depends,
and how they shed it: as before a lover.

Pale peach rose facing downward with deep yellow buds by Betsey Crawford

Is there anything they can’t be: wasn’t this yellow one
that lies here hollow and open the rind
of a fruit of which the same yellow,
more intense, more orange-red, was the juice?
And this one, could opening have been too much for it,
because, exposed to air, its nameless pink
has picked up the bitter aftertaste of lilac?
And isn’t this batiste one a dress, with
the chemise still inside it, still soft
and breath-warm, both flung off together
in morning shade at the bathing pool in the woods?
And this one here, opalescent porcelain,
fragile, a shallow china cup
filled with little lighted butterflies,
and this one, containing nothing but itself.

Bowl of Roses: Peachy petals of a David Austin rose in Manito Park, Spokane, Washington by Betsey Crawford

And aren’t they all doing the same: only containing themselves,
if to contain oneself means: to transform the world outside
and wind and rain and patience of spring
and guilt and restlessness and disguised fate
and darkness of earth at evening
all the way to the errancy, flight, and coming on of clouds
all the way to the vague influence of the distant stars
into a handful of inwardness.

Now it lies free of cares in the open roses.

Two yellow David Austin rose in Manito Park, Spokane, Washington by Betsey Crawford

Translated by Galway Kinnell & Hannah Liebman


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Soft yellow-pink David Austin roses at Manito Park's rose garden in Spokane, Washington by Betsey Crawford

THE POWER OF ALLUREMENT, THE MYSTERY OF BEAUTY

Beauty is an aspect of the universal power cosmologist Brian Swimme calls allurement, the great attracting force of our cosmos. It connects us to the forces that brought us here. And can lead us into the world we yearn for.

 

13 thoughts on “The Bowl of Roses”

  1. David Strumsky

    Betsey, I have no words. Yet I must respond. Reply. Somehow give voice and thought and a giving of thanks to you. I have found you quietly shining here. With this page of eloquent roses and a Rilke, floating all unknown to me these 70-plus years… Thanks.

    David in California

    1. Betsey

      Thank you so much, David. What a lovely comment. And how wonderful to discover The Bowl of Roses. Glad I could offer you that.

  2. Nynn Arwena G Tamayo

    Beautiful thoughts that heal.
    Thank you for sharing. So grateful.

  3. Deborah

    Once again an exquisite array of photographs! This blog has a special scent of Love and of course Beauty! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Forever emboldened in my heart and mind.

    1. Betsey

      Thank you, Deborah. What a lovely response!

  4. Kate Mears

    Thank you – may you walk always with beauty, and be generous enough to share it with us.

    1. Betsey

      Thank you so much, Kate. What a lovely thought.

  5. Adele Lambert

    So beautiful. I want to share with friends and family. Thank you.

    1. Betsey

      Thank you, Adele. I hope they enjoy it.

  6. Caitlin Adair

    Betsey, seeing the name and introduction of this post I had to go out to pick an apricot rose ‘At Last’, a small one in a pot, outside now but inside last winter. So I sit with your exquisite photos and my exquisite small apricot rose, astonished and awed. Rilke deepens the import of Rose. You highlight them both. I am not a poet, but I am moved by this coming together.
    with love
    Caitlin in Vermont

    1. Betsey

      Thank you, Caitlin. I love the picture of you reading with your rose beside you.

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