Geraniums are properly called Pelargoniums, but I can never
bring myself to call them that. The excellent Fibrex Nurseries call them
pellies, which is a little better. Whatever you call them, they are some of the most cheerful and cheering
of house plants. Sitting on windowsills and by front doors,
they are for many, the flower that reminds them most of home. You’d never
expect them to cause a family rift, which is exactly what the salmon-pink
geraniums do in Elizabeth Goudge’s The
Little White Horse. As Maria says ‘But how in the world could
you have such a dreadful lifelong quarrel just about geraniums?’
A few of my motley selection of geraniums. |
The Little White Horse is technically a children’s book,
but it is so enchanting, that even if you don’t
like her other work, and who wasn’t put off by the 15 page birth scene of Green Dolphin Street, it is worth trying
again with it. The Little White Horse
has some of her best characters, with the
most wonderful names, from Zachery the cat, to Marmaduke Scarlett and Loveday
Minnette.
Loveday Minnette leaves Cornwall as an orphan ‘possessing
nothing in the world but the clothes on my back and ten flower-pots with
cuttings of geraniums in them, those glorious salmon-pink geraniums that are
the pride of Cornwall.’ Over the years the geraniums multiply until they
overflow her room and begin to creep down the stairs of her turret (yes, she
lives in a castle, it is, after all, a fairy-tale), to the fury of her fiancée,
Sir Benjamin Merryweather. Despite the fairy-tale setting, it is an
understandable problem: one geranium can quickly become a houseful (or
castleful). They are so easy to take cuttings from, and quick to grow, that
propagating them is a rewarding and addictive pursuit. I started my second year of university
with one salmon pink geranium, and now, at a quick count, have around 30,
though not all from the original plant. Though my housemates at university were
slightly more tolerant of their increasing ranks than Sir
Benjamin. To take a cutting you simply cut (or snap) a healthy looking bit of
the geranium off and push the stem of it into a pot of compost. Don’t over
water them and keep them somewhere warm and sunny and very quickly you’ll have
a houseful.
As Loveday took her salmon pink geraniums with her to remind
her of her native Cornwall, another unlikely geranium loving exile is the
Lecherous Lecturer, Boy Dougdale in Nancy Mitford’s Love in a Cold Climate. The misery of his exile to Sicily with
Polly is succinctly described by Davey when he says;
‘You see, he has literally nothing to do from morning to
night, except water his geraniums, and you know how bad it is for them to have
too much water; of course. They are all leaf as a result.’
This is the only part of the book where I felt any sympathy
for the rather unpleasant Boy.
Geraniums do like to
be dry, so are perfect if you’re rather forgetful, or very busy. Your (minimal)
efforts will be bountifully rewarded with tonnes of bright flowers from Spring
to early Winter. Very worth growing, even if you’re not in exile.
I promise that not all of the posts will be exhorting you to
grow whatever plant is being written about. At some point I’ll try to write
about some plants to absolutely avoid. Any thoughts on bad literary plants?
If you want to start off with geraniums Fibrex Nurseries has
the national collection of pelargoniums:
http://www.fibrex.co.uk/pelargoniums/
This is a very good review of The Little White Horse if you
want to know a bit more about it http://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2014/jan/01/little-white-horse-elizabeth-goudge
I’ll leave you with the story of another geranium loving
exile!
The Dormouse and the
Doctor
A.A. Milne
There
once was a Dormouse who lived in a bed
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Of
delphiniums (blue) and geraniums (red)
|
And all
the day long he'd a wonderful view
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Of
geraniums (red) and delphiniums (blue)
|
A
Doctor came hurrying round, and he said:
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"Tut-tut,
I am sorry to find you in bed.
|
Just
say 'Ninety-nine', while I look at your chest...
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Don't
you find that chrysanthemums answer the best?"
|
The
Dormouse looked round at the view and replied
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(When
he'd said "Ninety-nine") that he'd tried and he'd tried,
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And
much the most answering things that he knew
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Were
geraniums (red) and delphiniums (blue).
|
The
Doctor stood frowning and shaking his head,
|
And he
took up his shiny silk hat as he said:
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"What
the patient requires is a change," and he went
|
To see
some chrysanthemum people in Kent.
|
The
Dormouse lay there, and he gazed at the view
|
Of
geraniums (red) and delphiniums (blue),
|
And he
knew there was nothing he wanted instead
|
Of
delphiniums (blue) and geraniums (red).
|
The
Doctor came back and, to show what he meant,
|
He had
brought some chrysanthemum cuttings from Kent.
|
"Now these,"
he remarked, "give a much better view
|
Than
geraniums (red) and delphiniums (blue)."
|
They
took out their spades and they dug up the bed
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Of
delphiniums (blue) and geraniums (red),
|
And
they planted chrysanthemums (yellow and white).
|
"And now,"
said the Doctor, "we'll soon have you right."
|
The
Dormouse looked out, and he said with a sigh:
|
"I
suppose all these people know better than I.
|
It was
silly, perhaps, but I did like the view
|
Of
geraniums (red) and delphiniums (blue)."
|
The
Doctor came round and examined his chest,
|
And
ordered him Nourishment, Tonics, and Rest.
|
"How
very effective," he said, as he shook
|
The
thermometer, "all these chrysanthemums look!"
|
The
Dormouse turned over to shut out the sight
|
Of the endless
chrysanthemums (yellow and white).
|
"How
lovely," he thought, "to be back in a bed
|
Of
delphiniums (blue) and geraniums (red)."
|
The
Doctor said, "Tut! It's another attack!"
|
And
ordered him Milk and Massage-of-the-back,
|
And Freedom-from-worry
and Drives-in-a-car,
|
And
murmured, "How sweet your chrysanthemums are!"
|
The
Dormouse lay there with his paws to his eyes,
|
And
imagined himself such a pleasant surprise:
|
"I'll pretend the
chrysanthemums turn to a bed
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Of delphiniums
(blue) and geraniums (red)!"
|
The
Doctor next morning was rubbing his hands,
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And
saying, "There's nobody quite understands
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These
cases as I do! The cure has begun!
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How
fresh the chrysanthemums look in the sun!"
|
The
Dormouse lay happy, his eyes were so tight
|
He
could see no chrysanthemums, yellow or white.
|
And all
that he felt at the back of his head
|
Were
delphiniums (blue) and geraniums (red).
|
And
that is the reason (Aunt Emily said)
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If a
Dormouse gets in a chrysanthemum bed,
|
You
will find (so Aunt Emily says) that he lies
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Fast
asleep on his front with his paws to his eyes.
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Poem from http://www.glirarium.org/bilch/literatur/
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