“Sturt's desert pea Meaning: Have courage, take heart Swainsona formosa | Inland Australia Malukuru (Pit.) are famous for distinctive blood-red, leaf-like flowers, each with a bulbous black centre, similar to a kangaroo's eye. A striking sight in the wild: a blazing sea of red. Bird-pollinated and thrives in arid areas, but very sensitive to any root disturbance, which makes it difficult to propagate.” CourageRedGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“I hope you're well, Alice. Here's to courage. And to heart, right? How about, here's also to the future, and everything it holds. Moss. Alice shook the envelope; a packet of desert pea seeds fell into her palm. 'That looks like some kind of magic,' Sally said. Alice gave her a small smile. 'It is.' She closed her hand around the packet of seeds, feeling their individual shapes and thinking of the color they would grow. To the future.” CourageFutureSeedsMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Wheel of fire Meaning: The color of my fate Stenocarpus sinuatus | Queensland and New South Wales Profuse bright red and orange flowers create a spectacular display from summer to autumn. Shaped like the spokes of a wheel before they open, these symmetrical blossoms get their name from their resemblance to a spinning fire.” FateGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersWheel Of Fire Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“The speed of light,' he explained. 'More specifically, how many metres per second light travels. I had it made after Aura was... gone. After you left for the west coast. I wanted something tangible I could hold on to. To remember. That I wasn't alone. I want you to take it. so that you remember. While you're away. You're never alone.' Jack leaned forward and ran a fingertip over the number sequence. 'The light in the stars that you'll look up and see in Denmark is travelling from the past. Some of that light started its journey when she was_' He looked to the dimming sky. Waited out the emotion. 'I want you to remember that some of the starlight you'll see every night in Denmark started its journey when Aura was still with us.' He finished. Esther clutched the keyring in her palm.” LoveBeautifulStarsLossGriefDevastating Book:The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding Source: The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding
“In the weatherboard house at the end of the lane, nine-year-old Alice Hart sat at her desk by the window and dreamed of ways to set her father on fire.” ChildrenAbuseTrauma Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“There has fallen a splendid tear From the passion-flower at the gate. She is coming, my dove, my dear; She is coming, my life, my fate; The red rose cries, 'She is near, she is near;' And the white rose weeps, 'She is late;' The larkspur listens, 'I hear, I hear;' And the lily whispers, 'I wait.' Alfred, Lord Tennyson” PoemFlowersArrivalAlfredLord Tennyson Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Beloved, thou hast brought me many flowers... ... take them, as I used to do Thy flowers, and keep them where they shall not pine. Instruct thine eyes to keep their colors true, And tell thy soul, their roots are left in mine. Elizabeth Barrett Browning” PoemFlowersElizabeth Barrett Browning Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Yellow bells Meaning: Welcome to a stranger Geleznowia verrucosa | Western Australia A small shrub with great yellow flowers. Sun loving, drought tolerant and requiring a well-drained soil. Will grow in a little shade, but sun for most of the day is essential. Makes a wonderful cut flower, although fickleness in propagation and seed germination make this a rare plant.” SunYellowGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Oggi went to his mother's rose garden and gathered a collection of fallen petals and leaves. When his hands were full he carried them back to Alice and placed them on the dirt around her. Back and forth he went, between the rose garden and Alice, until his circle was complete. He jumped inside it and sat down. 'After my dad died I did this to make myself feel better.' Oggi wrapped his arms around his knees. 'I told myself, anything inside the circle is safe from sadness. I'd make the circle as big or as little as I'd like. Once when Mum wouldn't stop crying I made a circle around the whole house. Except I had to use all of the petals on her roses to do that, and she didn't react the way I thought she would.' Yellow butterflies fluttered over the roses. As Alice watched their wings, tiny lemon flames, she remembered how they hovered over the sea in summer, basked in the casuarina trees, and tapped against her bedroom window at night.” SafetyPetalsButterfliesLeavesCircleCheering Up Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Here are three things I know for sure: 1. When I was born, someone- I like to think it was my mother- wrapped me in a blue ball gown. 2. There is a color in this world that was named after a king's daughter, who always wore gowns that were made of exactly the same shade of blue. The stories about her make me wish sometimes I could have been friends with her; she smoked in public (at a time when women didn't), once jumped fully clothed into a swimming pool with the captain of a ship, often wore a boa constrictor around her neck, and another time shot at telegraph poles from a moving train. 3. My favorite story goes like this: once, on an island not far from here, there was a queen who climbed a tree waiting for her husband to return from a battle. She tied herself to a branch and vowed to remain there until he returned. She waited for so long that she slowly transformed into an orchid, which was an exact replica of the pattern on the blue gown she was wearing. Here's one more thing that I know for sure is true. On the day June told us she was going to hospital to bring you home, I was in the workshop pressing blue lady orchids. I've always loved them best because their centres are my favorite color: the color of the gown I was once wrapped in. The color of a king's wayward daughter favored. A color called Alice blue.” CandyFairytaleAliceColor BlueOrchid Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“While the others tended the flowers outside, the kitchen was her garden, where feasts and banquets bloomed. At twenty-six, she couldn't imagine ever loving anything as much as cooking. Nothing fancy though; no big white plates and tiny morsels. Candy cooked to feed the soul. Flavor and quantity were of equal importance. She had become Thornfield's resident cook when she dropped out of high school and convinced June she was safe with knives. It's in your blood, Twig said after a bite of her first cassava cake, fresh from the oven. These are your gifts, June said when Candy served her first platter of spring rolls with mango chutney, made from homegrown vegetables and herbs. It was true; when she was cooking or baking, it was almost as if a deeper, hidden knowledge took over her hands, her instincts, her tastebuds. She thrived in the kitchen, spurred by the idea that maybe her mother was a chef, or her father a baker. Cooking soothed the incision-like cut she felt inside whenever she thought that she might never know.” CookingCandyBakingHidden Talents Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Sticky everlasting Meaning:My love will not leave you Xerochrysum viscosum | New South Wales and Victoria These paper-like flowers display hues of lemon, gold, and splotchy orange to fiery bronze. They can be easily cut, dried, and preserved while retaining their stunning colors.” FlowerEarthyGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersColors Of Nature Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“What plant?' 'Sorry?' "What plant did Mum leave, at the grave?' Sally went to the open window and reached through to pick a peach-colored flower from a blooming bush. She offered it to Alice. 'Beach hibiscus,' Alice cried softly, remembering the flower crown her mother made when she was a child. Remembering its meaning in the Thornfield Dictionary. Love binds us in eternity.” Meaning Of FlowersBoundPeach ColorEternallyHibiscus Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Striped mintbush Meaning: Love forsaken Prostanthera striatiflora | Centtral Australia Found in rocky gorges and near outcrops. Very strongly mint-scented. Narrow leathery leaves. The white flower is bell-shaped with purple stripes inside the bloom and yellow spots in the throat. Should not be ingested, as it can cause difficulty in sleeping. Vivid dreams are also symptomatic.” MintGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Black fire orchid Meaning: Desire to possess Pyrorchis nig'ricans|Western Australia Needs fire to flower. Sprouts from bulbs that may have lain dormant. Deep crimson streaks on pale flesh. Turns black after flowering, as if charred.” FireGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersOrchid Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Forked sundew, I die if neglected. Harlequin fuchsia, cure and relief. Wedding bush, constancy.” Meaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Flannel flower Meaning:What is lost is found Actinotus helianthi | New South Wales The stem, branches and leaves of the plant are a pale grey, covered in downy hair, and flannel-like in texture. Pretty, daisy-shaped flower heads bloom in spring, though flowering may be profuse after bushfires.” Genus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersDaisyFlannel Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“At the sight of Ruth, singing and crying in the moonlight, they say Jacob Wyld crouched wordlessly and planted seeds at her feet, in the earth between the roots of the gum tree. What grew from that night, where Ruth's tears fell to the earth, was a heath of wild vanilla lilies, and an equally heady love affair between Ruth and Jacob. They met at the river whenever Ruth could get away. He brought her flower seeds and she brought him whatever meager food scraps she could sneak from the house. Soon Ruth had enough seeds to till a small, shaded corner of dirt near the house, where a nearly dead, lone wattle tree stood. The dirt was so dry it took her a month to soften it with whatever water she could carry from the river. Eventually, the wattle tree exploded into flower, a winter blaze of sweet yellow. Ruth fell to her knees at the sight. The scent floated all the way into town. Bees droned around the tree, drunk on its nectar. Beneath the wattle were circles of green shoots. Ruth sketched each one in her small notebook. As they bloomed, so different to the foxgloves and snowdrops of her mother's songs, Ruth noted down what they meant to her, adapting the Victorian language of flowers. The strange and beautiful native flowers, able to flourish in the harshest conditions, enchanted Ruth; none more so than the deep scarlet flowers with red centres the color of the darkest blood. Meaning, Ruth wrote in her notebook, have courage, take heart.” TreeSeedsFlowersMagical RealismMeaning Of FlowersNew GrowthWattle Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Violet nightshade Meaning: Fascination, witchcraft Solanum brownii | New South Wales A member of the nightshade family, often toxic. Commonly associated with death and ghosts in folklore. Latin name comes from 'solamen' meaning to quieten or comfort, and refers to the narcotic properties of some species. Used as food plants by the larvae of some butterflies and moths.” MacabreDeadlyGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersNightshadeDark Beauty Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Spinifex Meaning: Dangerous pleasures Triodia | Central Australia Tjanpi (Pit.) is a tough, spiky grass dominating much of Australia's interior red sand country, thriving on the poorest, most arid soils the desert has to offer. Tussock-forming, its roots go deep, often as far down as three meters. Certain types are used by Anangu to make a resin adhesive.” GrassAustralianGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Desert heath-myrtle Meaning: Flame, I burn Thryptomene maisonneuvii | Northern Territory Traditionally, Anangu women beat pukara (Pit.) with a wooden bowl to collect dew containing nectar from the flowers. Thryptomene, derived from Greek, means coy or prudish; this bush appears modest but in winter through to spring produces a cloak of tiny white flowers with red centres, blooming as if revealing a secret.” AustralianGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersMyrtleBush Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Blue pincushion Meaning: I mourn your absence Brunonia australis | All states and territories A perennial found in woodlands, open forests and sand plains. Medium to deep blue flowers usually in spring, in hemispherical clusters on a tall stem. Can be difficult to establish. May die after a few years.” BlueGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersPerennial Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Cootamundra wattle Meaning: I wound to heal Acacia baileyana | New South Wales Graceful tree with fern-like foliage and bright golden-yellow globe-shaped flower heads. Adaptable, hardy evergreen, easy to grow. Profuse flowering in winter. Heavily fragrant and sweetly scented. Produces abundant pollen, favored for feeding bees in the production of honey.” TreeGoldenHoneyGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersWattle Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Painted feather flower Meaning: Tears Verticordia picta | Southwestern Australia A small to medium-sized shrub with pink, cupped flowers that are sweetly scented. Once established, it will only live for around ten years, with a profuse display of bright flowers over a long season.” Genus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Vanilla lily Meaning: Ambassador of love Sowerbaea juncea | Eastern Australia Perennial with edible roots found in eucalyptus forests, woodlands, heaths, and sub-alpine meadows. Grass-like leaves have a strong scent of vanilla. Flowers are pink-lilac to white, papery, with sweet vanilla perfume. Resprouts after fire.” LiliesVanillaGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Thorn box Meaning: Girlhood Bursaria spinosa | Eastern Australia Small tree or shrub with furrowed dark grey bark. Smooth branches are armed with thorns. Leaves yield pine-like fragrance when bruised. Sweetly scented white flowers bloom in summer. Provides nectar to butterflies and safety to small birds. Intricate architecture of thorns is much sought after by spiders for constructing webs.” ThornsGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“River Lily Meaning: Love concealed Crinum pedunculatum | Eastern Australia Very large perennial usually found on the edge of forests, but also at the high-tide level close to mangroves. Fragrant, white slender star-shaped flowers. Seeds sometimes germinate while still attached to the parent plant. The sap has been used as a treatment for box jellyfish stings.” AustralianLiliesGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersPerennial Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Pearl saltbush Meaning: My hidden worth Maireana sedifolia | South Australia and Northern Territory Common in deserts and salty environments, this low shrub creates a fascinating ecosystem of almost hidden treasures: geckoes, fairy wrens, fungi and lichen colonies. Drought-tolerant, with silvery grey evergreen foliage that forms a dense groundcover that is fire-retardant.” SaltGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersEcosystemBush Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Honey grevillea Meaning: Foresight Grevillea eriostachya | Inland Australia Kaliny-kalinypa (Pitjantjatjara) is a straggly shrub with long narrow silver-green leaves that produces bright green, yellow and orange flowers. Commonly grows on red sandhills and dunes. The flowers contain thick, honey-like nectar, which can be sucked from the flowers; a favorite treat for Anangu children.” DesertHoneyGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersPitjantjantjara Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Return of happiness, spoke one bouquet of waratahs, each the size of a human heart. Devotion, rose boronias said, a bunch of fragrant cupped flowers.” Meaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Copper-cups Meaning: My surrender Pileanthus vernicosus | Western Australia Slender woody shrub found in coastal heathlands, sand dunes and plains. Magnificent flowers ranging from red to orange and yellow. Flowering occurs in spring, on twiggy branchlets densely covered in small hardy leaves. Young floral buds bear a glossy oily coating.” Genus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersShrub Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“River red gum Meaning: Enchantment Eucalyptus camaldulensis | All states and territories Iconic Australian tree. Smooth bark sheds in long ribbons. Has a large, dense crown of leaves. Seeds require regular spring floods to survive. Flowers late spring to mid-summer. Has the ominous nickname 'widow maker', as it often drops large boughs (up to half the diameter of the trunk) without warning.” TreeAustralianGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Blue lady orchid Meaning: Consumed by love Thelymitra crinita | Western Australia Perennial spring-flowering orchid. Flowers are intensely blue and form a delicate star shape. Does not need a bushfire to stimulate flowering, but can be smothered by other vegetation, so periodic burns to restrict taller-growing shrubs are beneficial.” BlueGenus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersOrchid Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Gorse bitter pea Meaning: Ill-natured beauty Daviesia ulicifolia | All states Spiny shrub with stunning yellow and red pea flowers. Blooms in summer. Easy propagation from seed, following scarification. Seed retains viability for many years. Unpopular with gardeners for its very prickly habit, but beneficial to small birds as a refuge from predators.” Genus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Showy banksia Meaning: I am your captive Banksia speciosa | Western Australia and Southern Australia Small tree that has thin leaves with prominent 'teeth'. Cream-yellow flower spikes appear throughout the year, which store seeds until opened by fire. The flowers attract nectar-feeding birds, particularly honeyeaters.” TreeGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Orange Immortelle Meaning: Written in the stars Waitzia acuminata | Western Australia Perennial with long, narrow leaves, and papery orange, yellow and white flowers. Spring blooming after winter rain. En masse these flowers are spectacular. Have been found in their millions across much of the scrub and desert in the west, with people often traveling long distances to see them.” Genus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersPerennial Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Broad-leaved parkeelya Meaning: By your love, I live and die Calandrinia balonensis | Northern Territory Parkilypa (Pit.) is a succulent growing in sandy soils of arid regions, with fleshy leaves and bright purple flowers, which appear mainly in winter and spring. In times of drought the leaves can be a water source; the whole plant can be baked and eaten.” Genus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersSucculent Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Desert oak Meaning: Resurrection Allocasuarina decaisneana | Central Australia Kurkara (Pit.) have deeply furrowed, cork-like bark, which is fire-retardant. Slow-growing but fast to develop a taproot that can reach subsurface water at depths over ten meters. Mature trees form a large, bushy canopy. Many found in the central desert are likely to be more than one thousand years old.” AustralianOakGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Lantern bush Meaning: Hope may blind me Abutilon leucopetalum | Northern Territory Tjirin-tjrinpa (Pit.) is found in dry, often rocky inland regions. Leaves have a heart-shaped base. Yellow hibiscus-like flowers appear mostly in winter and spring, but can sometimes appear endlessly, their bright color shining all year round. Used by Anangu children to make small toy spears.” Genus SpeciesMeaning Of FlowersBush Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Bat's wing coral tree Meaning: Cure for heartache Erythrina vespertilio | Central and northeast Australia Ininti (Pit.) wood is widely used for making spear throwers and bowls. Bark, fruit and stems are used for traditional medicine. Has bat's-wing-shaped leaves, and coral-colored flowers in spring/summer. Attractive, glossy bean-shaped seeds vary in color from deep yellow to blood red, and are used for decoration and jewelry.” TreeGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“As she drove away she thought about the flowers she'd sketched for him. Billy buttons. She'd drawn one after the other, bright balls of yellow on skinny stems, over and over again, covering the paper, except for the far right corner where she'd written their meaning. My gratitude.” GratitudeMossMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Green birdflower Meaning: My heart flees Crotalaria cunninghamii | Mid to western states Widespread on sandy soils in mulga communities and on sand dunes, this shrub bears soft hairs on thick and pithy branches. The flower resembles a bird attached by its beak to the central stalk of the flower head; yellow-green, streaked with fine purple lines. Blooms in winter and spring. Pollinated by large bees, and birds.” BirdGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Foxtails Meaning: Blood of my blood Ptilotus | Inland Australia Tjulpun-tjulpunpa (Pit.) are small shrubs that form spikes of purple flowers covered in dense white hairs. Leaves are covered in closely packed star-shaped hairs that slow the rate of water loss. Traditionally, women used the soft furry flowers to line wooden bowls in which babies could be carried.” ShrubsGenus SpeciesMeaning Of Flowers Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“On either side of the laneway, rain-soaked bushes burst into a flurry of white flowers. Alice's first breaths were filled with lightning and the scent of storm lilies in bloom. You were the true love I needed to wake me from a curse, Bun, her mother would say to finish the story. You're my fairytale.” WhiteFlowersFairytaleNewbornMother And DaughterRescuer Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“She wandered around Sally's garden, sipping coffee, stopping to admire the grevillea and talk to the chickens. As the warmth of the sun unknotted the tension in her spine, Alice noticed a lush alley of potted tropical plants alongside the house: monstera, bird of paradise, agave, staghorns and ferns. Alice was filled with a sense of wonder; it was a garden within a garden, so meticulous and well-tended in contrast to the wild beauty surrounding it. The sumptuous blends of greens. The varying, glossy foliage.” AustralianTherapeuticGardensPotted Plants Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“El pasado siempre se las ingenia para echar nuevos brotes. Si no las tratas como es debido, esas historias encontrarán por sí mismas la manera de hacerse presentes” Pasado Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Alice recalled one of the books Dylan had read to her, a collection of Japanese fairytales. In one, a woman artist practiced kintsugi, repairing broken pottery with lacquer mixed with powdered gold. There'd been an illustration of a woman bent over a pile of broken pottery pieces, laid out to fit together, with a fine paintbrush in her hand, its bristles dipped in gold. It had enchanted Alice, the idea that breakage and repair were part of the story, not something to be disdained or disguised.” RepairingKintsugiJapanese Folklore Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“In my family monarch butterflies are daughters of fire. They come from the sun carrying the souls of warriors who fought and died in battle, and return to feed on the nectar of flowers.” FireWarriorsMonarch Butterflies Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Around them, the willowy needles of desert oak trees swayed in the pale orange light. Wafts of yellow butterflies fluttered low over acacia and mulga bushes. The crater wall slowly changed color as the sun sank, from flat ochre to blazing red to chocolate-purple. The sun slipped under the dark line of the horizon, glowing like an ember as it threw its last light up into the sky.” DesertSunsetAustraliaColors Of NatureCrater Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
“Her mother was peaceful. She was calm. The sight filled Alice with the kind of green hope she found at the bottom of rock pools at low tide but never managed to cup in her hands. The more time she spent with her mother in the garden, the more deeply Alice understood- from the tilt of Agnes's wrist when she inspected a new bud, to the light that reached her eyes when she lifted her chin, and the thin rings of dirt that encircled her fingers as she coaxed new fern fronds from the soil- the truest parts of her mother bloomed among her plants. Especially when she talked to the flowers. Her eyes glazed over and she mumbled in a secret language, a word here, a phrase there as she snapped flowers off their stems and tucked into her pockets. Sorrowful remembrance, she'd say as she plucked a bindweed flower from its vine. Love, returned. The citrusy scent of lemon myrtle would fill the air as she tore it from a branch. Pleasures of memory. Her mother pocketed a scarlet palm of kangaroo paw.” GardeningMother And DaughterSecret Language Book:The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart Source: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart