The Language of Flowers by Flavia Brilli: sultry

Showing posts with label sultry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sultry. Show all posts

THE TULIP




Purple tulip 'Queen of the Night' by Flavia Brilli

Mighty oceans of darkness gently flow
Shiny pearls like stars brightly glow
Sensation of your elegant bloom
Appears once in a blue moon

Suspending on a rough spiky surface
Swaying like a pretty young princess

Blooming throughout one summer night
Until become whole and bright

Seducing enigmatic fragrance of absolute divine
Mesmerizing sweet scent of mother natures design

Precious wonder under the calm moonlight
You are the gracious Queen of the Night

© Hemakumar Nanayakkara

ce in a blue moon

Close up of three purple tulips called 'Queen of the Night' by Flavia Brill

Purple Tulip 'Queen of the Night' by Flavia Brilli


'Queen of the Night'
The most delicious, sultry, purple tulip in my garden.


Flavia Brilli, actress and singer, with purple tulip.


Tulip: from the latinized version of the Turkish word for Turban, 'Tubend'. Most likely because the shape of the flower resembled a turban. 



The Black Tulip
'Queen of the Night'
Drama and Elegance

There's something truly magical and mesmerising about the dark lustre of this beautiful tulip. Every Spring I wait patiently for my purple Goddesses to rise and display their sultry heads. And throughout the day I watch and marvel as the changing sunlight changes their purple hues from lightest violet to deepest burgundies and in the shadows almost black.



Close up of  tulip 'Queen of the Night' by Flavia Brilli



Close up of 'Queen of the Night' purple tulip by Flavia Brilli


Close up of Purple tulip 'Queen of the Night' by Flavia Brilli

The Black Tulip
History and Literature

'To have discovered the black tulip, to have seen it for a moment...then to lose it, to lose it forever!'

from  'The Black Tulip' by Dumas


Alexandre Dumas
In Alexandre Dumas's novel 'The Black Tulip', its central character, Cornelius, devotes his life to cultivating a black tulip in order to win the prize of 100,000 guilders. But his jealous neighbour, Boxtel, tricks him into being arrested and he is flung into jail. There he meets the prison guard's beautiful daughter, Rosa, who he entrusts his black tulip bulbs to and who eventually becomes his rescuer.


Alexandre Dumas by Achille Devéria (1829).

Alexandre Dumas by Achille Devéria (1829).


History of the Black Tulip


Since the publishing of Dumas's novel 'La Tulipe Noire', in 1850, generations of Dutch Tulip growers have been inspired to try their hand at creating the Holy Grail of Tulips: The Black Tulip. 

In 1937, the grower, C. Keur, registered his exotic 'Black Parrot', tulip. This was followed in 1944, by the still today very popular 'Queen of The Night', created by J.J. Gruellman. In 1955, M. Van. Waveran's, 'Black Beauty', arrived on the scene. But despite all three being unquestionably the deepest and darkest of all tulips, they were still in fact all darkest purple.

Today, we have the very darkest of all tulips ever created, the 'Paul Scherer. Cultivated by the Dutch flower grower Hageman. This specimen was created by cross-pollinating two of the deepest purple tulips, The Queen of the Night and Wienerwald tulips. And, although it can never claim to be completely and truly black, it is undoubtedly the darkest beauty to date.

The Paul Scherer Tulip- Currently the blackest of the black Tulips




White and purple tulips by Flavia Brilli
White tulip unfurling in the morning sunlight with purple tulips in background by Flavia Brilli


Roman Mythology


According to Roman mythology, the Tulip was once a beautiful Dalmatian nymph, whose sea God father endowed her with his love of  bright changing colours. 

One day, the God of Spring, Vertumnus, spied the colourful nymph playing by a stream, and was so captivated by her beauty that he tried to take her by force. 

Fortunately, her cries were heard by the rural powers, who changed her into a flower of many hues, and Vertumnus was thwarted.


Love Nymph by Anders Zorn 1885
Love Nymph by Anders Zorn 1885


Emperor Rudolf II as Vertumnus, the Roman god of Spring and the seasons by Guiseppe Archimboldo


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