As we stepped into mum's apartment the other day, my senses were immediately struck by a smell that I knew so well yet also could not quite place. I'd been caught by a scent that was both heavy and heady, yet full of light and shade at the same time. Each pace I took along the hallway the stronger the scent became... until, as I passed the kitchen doorway, I saw some narcissus in a small glass vase and was instantly transported to another time and place; to a time some four decades ago and a place some 3 miles from where I stood... When we lived as a family at Le Pignon, a home near the centre of the island in the parish of Castel, I would walk with friends to school; Castel Infant School. I guess I was around ten or eleven, with no cares in the world and a host of unknown hopes and dreams ahead. Our journey to school would be along Rue des Varendes, which lead onto Le Villocq, up Le Neuve Rue, right into Rue des Cauvains (avoiding the electric shock treatments of the Castel Hospital!!), then passed the King Edward VII Hospital, and then, as we got to the T-junction with Les Vieux Beauchamps there they were, directly in front of us.... a field of golden daffodils dancing in all their sunshiney glory. Yet for me it was not the yellow beauties that caught my eye, it was the yellow-eyed white narcissus that did, and they caught my nose too... and my imagination. These cherished mutli-headed floral gems were called Avalanche, and dad told me that they were from the Scilly Isles, which I always thought a wonderful name for an amazing multi-headed cascading fall of blooms... yet a silly name for a group of islands. As we'd walk home from another joy filled day of school - and I do mean that as my schooldays were full of the joys of learning, of numbers, of letters, of nature, of play, and of friends - we would pick a bunch or two of flowers on our way. Diving into the field, we would gently pick a handful with the billy-goat-gruff farmer looking on... "Don't take too many... I gots to make my livin'". As we walked to the back doors of our homes, where comfort and love abounded, the hands of each of my friends was the glory of a bunch of golden daffodils for their mum; in mine a multi-headed magisterial mystery of name and of place enveloped in gold and white petalled flows for my mum, Mary. Those few steps into mum's apartment a few days ago really took me back... more than four decades... to a heady scent of the past. A Guernsey Gardener in London - Day 25
10 Comments
Anna Kozlowski
5/2/2020 12:15:04 pm
Precious 💌
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Paul Savident
5/2/2020 10:05:03 pm
🤗😊🤗
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Izzy
5/2/2020 09:46:26 pm
hi Paul, I read this latest blog out loud to Anne and she said she could clearly imagine the scenes you describe. We agreed that it seems you hold some very happy and special memories of your childhood in your heart, and that it is lovely of you to share them.
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Paul Savident
5/2/2020 10:07:36 pm
Thank you Izzy and Anne. My childhood was full of special times and precious moments. I am fortunate that there are so many, and that I still have my mum to share the memories with me; and that I am able to share them with others. 😊
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brian j brown
6/2/2020 02:30:51 pm
That was absolutely beautiful, you transported me to a summer day which in my was the French countryside
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Paul Savident
6/2/2020 03:12:44 pm
There are few places better than the French countryside! 😊
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jane kelly
18/3/2020 07:04:55 pm
A really evocative piece Paul. Thank you.
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Paul S Savident
19/3/2020 07:49:58 am
🤗
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Paul Savident
27/8/2022 10:27:27 am
Thank you for taking to time to read it. 😊
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