
This is a special time of year in my part of Canada: the lilacs are speaking!
Lilac flowers don’t use words, of course. They announce their presence through their beautiful fragrance and delicate purple colour.
But there’s another way lilac shrubs can talk to us. Their very location can give us clues to the history of a place.
“…the story of early Canada can be read in the lilacs clustered where log cabins once stood, at the edge of abandoned fields—flowers marking time in centuries.” (from “A New Leaf,” by Merilyn Simonds)
Settlers to the northern parts of North America would often plant lilac shrubs on either side of the front door to their farmhouse. Generations or even centuries later, the building has long since been torn down, but the lilacs live on.
If you see a pair of huge lilac bushes in a field or empty lot, you can be pretty sure they used to flank someone’s front door. The house is gone, the family has moved away, but the fragrance of the lilacs they planted still fills the air.
This reminds me a bit of how prayers can live on, long after the person who prayed them is gone.
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