If you grow it they will come.
Lavender that is.
Embed from Getty ImagesNot so far away several acres of transplanted heaven glows blue and purple.
Hip high bushes tremble in the Summer breeze.
A Summer breeze carrying an intoxicating scent that lifts the heart and calms the spirit.
Peace comes dropping slow.
Rows and rows of nature’s glory climb towards a hazy horizon.
People of all ages and cultures walk the straight path between the rows with like devout pilgrims.
In the shimmering stillness there is an awareness of profound blessings to be harvested here.
Settling into the self, breathing slow, sloughing off the shackles of busyness.
Emerging into simple being.
Being.
The bonny birds wheel higher and higher in the sky making perhaps for Leith Hill.
Embed from Getty ImagesLeith Hill where the young Ralph Vaughan Williams’ musical soul was quickened and nourished.
Embed from Getty ImagesA musical soul which survived the horrors of war to produce quicksilver streams of tender beauty.
A musical soul which evoked in, ‘The Lark Ascending’ a sense of the mystical gyre uniting life and death.
Walking among the lavender it seemed as if this wondrous music infused the air.
I have chosen to feature an incandescent performance by by Nicola Benedetti.
Listening we are invited to enter the realm of the sublime.
Note: I would urge you to seek out the astonishing poem by George Meredith which inspired Vaughan Willians to create his own masterwork.
Beautiful! I never tire of this piece of wonderful music and Nicola Benedetti’s playing is sublime indeed.
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Thanks Clare. There’s definitely something mysteriously restorative about the music. Regards Thom.
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I love this. Very peaceful and very relaxing.
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Thanks. Exactly! Thom
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Just beautiful! This music was the first classical piece I ever heard as a child and it touched and opened me in a way I would find challenging to describe even now. I have never forgotten the feeling. Thanks Thom, for a lovely start to my morning.
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Thanks. Yes, the blessing of music is to evoke what can never be fully expressed in language. Regards Thom.
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