blossomed back in 1923 its ghost haunting the book
its head bent over the line "Fame is no plant that grows on mortal soil."
staining the word "Fame" with its own lost shadow
the unknown woman in the photographs laughs
at my discovering her dressed in black and white in black and white
hands stuck in pockets defiantly staring back at me
she more real than me
the only other photo she has removed her hands
from her pockets producing them like a magic trick
they lay on her lap like limpid rabbits
curiously alive somehow
a sheen of sunlight catches her Marcel wave
Petrella the photograph names her
in writing as elegant as she
early spring 1923.
*
Key of Heaven is only one of the names for the common cowslip( Primula Veris ). It travels under other names such as cuy lippe, herb peter, paigle, peggle, key flower, fairy cups, petty mulleins, crewel, buckles, palsywort, plumrocks and tittypines.
There was also a recipe for a delicious sparkling cowslip wine. Alas the book was too expensive for my means and I was more interested in the cowslip dying between Milton's lines and the woman who was Petrella back in the days of the year 19 and 23!
I no longer remember how to make cowslip wine and I never did.
A book I didn't buy in the Oxfam Bookshop Guildford but did inspire me in a completely different way. One never knows what one will find at any one time in my favourite bookshop.