Fancies
Finding Beauty in the Bloom: A Modern Look at L.M. Montgomery’s “Fancies”
In a world that often feels dominated by pixels and fast-paced deadlines, L.M.
Montgomery’s “Fancies” serves as a gentle, vibrant reminder that the soul of nature is woven from our very best human moments.
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Surely the flowers of a hundred springs
Are simply the souls of beautiful things!
The poppies aflame with gold and red
Were the kisses of lovers in days that are fled.
The purple pansies with dew-drops pearled
Were the rainbow dreams of a youngling world.
The lily, white as a star apart,
Was the first pure prayer of a virgin heart.
The daisies that dance and twinkle so
Were the laughter of children in long ago.
The sweetness of all true friendship yet
Lives in the breath of the mignonette.
To the white narcissus there must belong
The very delight of a maiden’s song.
And the rose, all flowers of the earth above,
Was a perfect, rapturous thought of love.
Oh! surely the blossoms of all the springs
Must be the souls of beautiful things.
I was revisiting Lucy Maud Montgomery’s “Fancies” recently, and discovered something so sophisticated yet grounding in her idea that flowers are actually the “souls of beautiful things.” In our contemporary rush to digitize everything, Montgomery’s vision of poppies as “kisses of lovers” and daisies as “the laughter of children” reminds us that the natural world is a living archive of human emotion.
It’s a refreshing perspective for us today, don’t you think? It encourages us to look at a simple garden not just as landscaping, but as a collection of “rapturous thoughts” and “true friendship” preserved in petals. It’s a call to trade our cynicism for a bit of her “rainbow dreams.” It suggests that nothing beautiful is ever truly lost; it simply changes form.
As you read this poem, ask yourself: “If my most joyful moments today were to bloom as a flower tomorrow, what color and fragrance would they bring to the world?”