Having roses bloom *right* outside your window is the nicest..
24 Feb, 2023
Title:
Having roses bloom *right* outside your window is the nicest..
Message:
Having roses bloom *right* outside your window is the nicest thing everš¹, the smell of them really does travel through the room, i wouldnāt of thought that theyād smell so strong but they rly do during spring/summer. Ill show you what they look like when they finally bloom! Its winter here now though so theyre just thornsš„.. which i love too. It reminds me of a story I used to read called āthe nightingale and the roseā by oscar wilde. It disturbed me a little which is probably why i so visually remember it so well,dont you find that too? That you specifically remember those memories where you found something very vaguely unsettling, like the treehouse of horror simpsons episodeās or if anybody watched courage the cowardly dog š
Anyway heres a *short* summary of the story, give it a read if u like (no worries if not!)
The narrator is an unnamed man. In the story, he is referred to as the StudentšØāš. When the story begins, the Student wanders around a rose garden, pining for a girl š©. The girl promised to dance with him if he brought her a red rose, but he canāt find any. He canāt believe that, in such a large garden, the roses are all white. If he doesnāt dance with the girl, he knows heāll be unhappy forever. From a nearby tree, a nightingale šļø listens to the Studentās depressing story. She sings about love all the time, but she didnāt think sheād ever understand it. Now, she has an epiphany. She canāt believe how much the Student looks like the typical hero in romance stories. He has brown hair, pale skin, rich red lips, and a melancholy expression. She thinks that the Student is perfect ā„ļø
The Student only has until the following night to find a red rose š¹ . Itās the night of the royal ball, and this is his final chance to impress the girl. Thereās no point in attending the ball if he canāt dance with her. Someone else will court the girl and marry her, and the Student will die from a broken heart š. All the while, the nightingale listens to his sorry tale, and she decides that there must be some way to help him win the girlās heart.
The nightingale mulls over what to do while the Student lies down on the grass and cries. A lizard and a butterfly pass by, and they wonder what all the fuss is about. Soon, even garden flowers talk amongst themselves about this tragic, heartbroken boy. However, when the nightingale tells the garden animals about the red rose, they laugh. The lizard and the butterfly think that heās being ridiculous, and they go about their merry business. Meanwhile, the nightingale flies around the garden, looking for a red rose. Various garden trees direct her to rosebushes, but she only finds yellow and white roses. Itās not until she reaches a tree under the Studentās bedroom window that she finds red roses. š However, the tree doesnāt give away roses for free. To earn a red rose, the nightingale must complete various deadly tasks. šŖ¦
The nightingale asks for more information about these tasks. The tree explains that she must impale herself on a rose thorn and die singing a love song. Ble-eding beside the tree will turn a white rose into a red one. If sheās prepared to sacrifice herself for love, then she deserves the red rose. Otherwise, sheās wasting the treeās time and she should leave him alone.
At first, the nightingale refuses to kill herself. She claims that no one should die for love. However, the more she thinks about the Student and his plight, the more she understands that love means selflessness. If she isnāt prepared to sacrifice herself, then she doesnāt care enough. Making the Student happy is more important than her own survival. The nightingale returns to the Student. Heās still lying on the grass, crying. He doesnāt see any way out of his predicament. The nightingale tells him that she has a plan, and that everything will work out in the end. She promises to get him a red rose, but thereās a condition attached to her generosity.
The nightingale will only sacrifice herself if sheās sure that the Student truly loves the girl. He must love the girl unconditionally and purely. He must be willing to marry her, and he must be willing to die for her. However, thereās a problemāthe Student doesnāt know what sheās saying. Itās not just because sheās a bird and heās a human. Itās because he doesnāt understand the language of love.
The nightingale thinks that the Student understands her. She sheds her blo-od and dies by pressing herself against a thorn. š„š©øšThe Student, ignorant to the nightingaleās sacrifice, takes up the rose and rushes to find the girl. The girl dismisses the Student because heās poor, lowly, and unworthy of her. She chooses a lover who can buy her fancy jewelry instead šš. The Student decides that heāll never understand love or women and he throws the rose away. He doesnāt believe that love exists anymore. A cart runs over the rose petals, crushing them. The sacrifice was for nothing, and the Student has no idea what the nightingale sacrificed for him. If we love someone purely, we will act for them, whether they know it or not.
š„°ā¤ļø
It always made me so amazed how one of my favourite love stories was one between a human and a bird :,)
TLDR; i like the thorns outside my window