【Anime Archives】
Vanitas
Best of 2020
We’re away until January 4, but we’re reposting some of our favorite pieces from 2020. Enjoy your holiday!

Abraham Mignon, The Nature as a Symbol of Vanitas, c. 1665-79
I like flowers all right, I suppose. I like having them around, I like how they smell. I like their delicate skins, their manner of shedding yellow everywhere in a fine powder. I try to stop on the street, when I can, to bend down and look directly into their faces. I have mild flower preferences, in a bodega-selection way: ranunculus over chrysanthemums, peonies over roses, lilies over hydrangeas. Having lived in New York City my entire adult life, bodega-flower choice has been more or less the extent of the relationship.
It’s possible that I no longer live in New York City, a fact that won’t be decided until next year sometime and which I only relay here because the place I currently inhabit has a lot of wildflowers and no bodegas. Inasmuch as flowers exist here, they exist because they come out of the ground randomly, with no rubric or intention or market. First there were lilacs (on bushes!) and then when the lilacs died the peonies bloomed, which began wilting just as the day lilies and trout lilies and tiger lilies sprang open like self-peeling bananas. That was right around when Dame’s Rocket, highlighter purple, was all over the fields and dominating the unmowed grasses along the side of the road. A gigantic mock orange bush exploded into blossoms and made everything smell like, naturally, orange blossoms. Then vervain, then Queen Anne’s Lace like weeds, wild lupines. Right now we are in red clover.
Trying to articulate what’s so stunning about watching flowers just appear and disappear makes me sound like an idiot. I was on a long walk with an older gentleman who’s been watching the seasons cycle in this part of the world for something like ninety years, and trying my best. “They just arrive!” I said. “And then they go!”
He seemed briefly at a loss for a response. “That’s true,” he said, encouragingly.
Helplessly, moronically, I am amazed by them. Their brevity, for one. Lilacs bloom for … maybe two weeks? Most of the year they just look like bushes, and then for the briefest moment they burst into the lushest Day-Glo purple, a jammy, fragrant, fecund burgeoning. Everything within a quarter mile smells like sweetness. And then after a few days the purple begins to look slightly blurry, slightly less explosive in its presence. And then you wake up one morning and the bush is just a bush again: green, leafy, pretty but unremarkable. This repeats itself again and again in waves, as every flower’s death is met by the profusion of some new species whose moment in the season has arrived. This all happens, uninterrupted and untended, wholly separate from human timelines and activity, relentlessly.
Read more >>
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Dell S3422DWG Gaming Monitor deal: save $100 at Amazon
2025-06-26 12:29Rita Dove’s “Canary” by Chantal McStay
2025-06-26 11:51The Morning News Roundup for July 15, 2014
2025-06-26 11:25God, Olivia Rodrigo's 'SOUR' merch is brutal
2025-06-26 11:23Amazon Pet Day: All the best deals
2025-06-26 10:52Popular Posts
Skype is finally shutting down
2025-06-26 13:19Notes from the Milk Cave
2025-06-26 12:08She Jazzes That Dazzling Verse
2025-06-26 12:06The 10 Most Anticipated PC Games of 2017
2025-06-26 11:07Featured Posts
Best JBL deal: Save $80 on JBL Xtreme 4 portable speaker
2025-06-26 13:06Under the Volcano
2025-06-26 12:23Elon Musk wants to remove headlines from news articles on X
2025-06-26 12:16The Oldest Book in English, and Other News by Dan Piepenbring
2025-06-26 12:09A worthless juicer and a Gipper-branded server
2025-06-26 11:39Popular Articles
Draper vs. Arnaldi 2025 livestream: Watch Madrid Open for free
2025-06-26 13:24Happy Birthday, Harold Bloom
2025-06-26 12:16Thomas Berger, 1924–2014
2025-06-26 12:03Mario voice actor Charles Martinet 'stepping back' from role
2025-06-26 11:31What's Thermal Throttling and How to Prevent It
2025-06-26 10:55Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (775)
Exploration Information Network
Best vacuum mop combo deal: Save $140 on the Tineco Floor One S5
2025-06-26 13:26Highlight Information Network
Letter from Jerusalem
2025-06-26 12:42Happiness Information Network
The Golden West: An Interview with Daniel Fuchs
2025-06-26 11:46Sharing Information Network
Blue True Dream of Sky by Sadie Stein
2025-06-26 11:01Torch Information Network
No Time for a Negative Peace
2025-06-26 10:57