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May 21, 2026 Pierre Magnol, Emily Dix, Robert Creeley, Bella Donna by Jill Johnson, and Henri Rousseau

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Today's Show Notes

On this day in 1950, the English gardener Vita Sackville-West sat down with her garden journal and noticed something she couldn't let go of.

In her earnestness for horticulture, Vita wrote that snobbishness lives in gardens the same way it lives everywhere else.

That we sometimes pass a plant not because it lacks beauty — but because it has become too familiar.

Too common.

Too easy to overlook.

Once Vita asked:

What do we lose when we stop seeing something because we've decided we've already seen it?

May has a way of putting that question right in front of us.

Right now, the garden is at its fullest.

And we find ourselves moving past whole sections of it without stopping.

Maybe today is a good day to slow down.

The common thing.

The familiar one.

The one you stopped being surprised by.

It might still have something to say.

Today's Garden History

1715 Pierre Magnol died in Montpellier.

A city he had never really left.

And a city that had never quite let him in.

Born in 1638 as the youngest son of a generational apothecary family, Pierre grew up in a household that smelled of crushed herbs and drying roots.

He earned his medical degree in 1659.

And then, instead of practicing medicine, Pierre turned almost entirely to plants.

As a young man, he spent long seasons walking — the Alps, the Pyrenees, and the islands off the coast — filling his journals.

For much of his life, Pierre's biggest dream was to manage the Montpellier Botanic Garden.

The oldest botanic garden in France.

But Pierre was Protestant in a France that was becoming Catholic in its bones.

And when the position of Demonstrator of Plants opened in 1664, Pierre was the strongest candidate.

But he was passed over.

And when a professorship opened in 1667, he was again the most qualified.

And again, he was passed over.

But through every rejection, he kept walking.

And at the same time, he kept filling his journals with dreams.

Thinking about the way plants related to one another.

Not just as lists.

Everyone made lists like that.

But as families.

As connections that were not obvious to most gardeners.

In his heart, Pierre knew the way a rose and an apple carried the same arrangement of petals and stamens.

He knew that characteristics in families were shared.

Passed down.

To him, it was history written into the shape of a living thing.

Waiting for someone to read it.

In 1685, the Edict of Nantes was revoked.

The law that had protected Protestants in France for nearly a century.

Suddenly, Pierre had a choice:

His faith.

Or his life's work.

He converted.

Within two years, the doors that had been shut for decades finally opened.

In 1687, he was appointed Demonstrator of Plants at Montpellier.

In 1689, he published his masterwork.

For the first time in history, Pierre used the word "family" to describe natural groupings of plants.

He organized seventy-six of them.

Not by one feature.

But by what he called the total composition.

The whole shape of a thing.

Before Pierre, botany was a list.

After Pierre, it was a tree.

Sixty years later, Carl Linnaeus would arrive and build his famous system on this foundation.

Pierre didn't get that credit.

But he finally got the garden he always wanted.

In his final years, he served as Inspector of the Montpellier Botanic Garden.

Surrounded by the seventy-six families he had spent his whole life arranging.

He was seventy-six years old.

By then, the botanist Charles Plumier had already named something for him.

A magnificent flowering tree discovered in the Caribbean.

He never saw one bloom.

But every spring since, when the magnolias open — first, before anything else, before the gardener is ready — they are still delivering a tribute to a man who gave up his faith to be allowed to do what he loved.

1904 Emily Dix was born in Penclawdd.

A small town on the Gower Peninsula in Wales.

Where the coastline meets the edge of coal country.

And the landscape carries both.

Growing up on a farm, Emily's family worked the land.

She was bright and gregarious.

And at eighteen, a scholarship brought her to University College Swansea.

There, she found Arthur Trueman.

A geologist who had figured out how to date rock layers using fossilized mussels.

When Trueman looked at her, he saw something rare.

And called her the most extraordinarily brilliant student he had ever taught.

After Emily graduated with First Class Honors, she found her subject:

The fossilized plants trapped inside coal.

Three hundred million years ago, the land that became Wales was a tropical swamp.

There were giant ferns.

Towering clubmosses.

Ancient horsetails.

They lived and died in dark water.

Pressed into rock over millions of years.

During the 1920s, the coal mines of South Wales were working around the clock.

And Emily was granted access to go inside them.

An unusual privilege for a woman.

The mining engineers didn't just tolerate her.

They admired her.

As Emily descended, she looked for leaves on the walls.

The farther down she traveled, the more she realized that the fossilized plants changed over time in a specific order.

One family of ancient ferns dominated a certain era.

Then another family replaced it when the climate shifted.

As the fossilized leaves changed across layers of rock, she could identify exactly where she was in time.

From her repeated observations, Emily created nine floral zones.

Nine distinct timestamps in the Welsh coal.

As a result, a mining engineer could hand her a piece of rock.

And she could tell him which layer he was working in.

And how deep the coal beneath it would be.

From all of that work, Emily turned fossilized leaves into a map.

In 1936, the Geological Society of London awarded Emily the Murchison Fund.

One of their highest honors.

While the president gave a long speech about the high industrial value of her work, the archives note, simply, that Emily herself made no reply.

She let the fossils speak.

Then came 1941.

While Emily was evacuated to Cambridge, German bombs hit London.

Her records were destroyed.

Years of field notes.

Her catalogs.

All her books.

The fossils survived.

But Emily's work did not.

Afterward, she tried to carry on.

But the war had scattered her colleagues.

And the loss of the records had shaken something in her.

In June 1945, just as the war in Europe ended, Emily led one last geological field trip.

Then she stopped.

At forty-one years old — at the very height of her powers — she suffered a complete mental breakdown.

Then she entered The Retreat.

A Quaker hospital in York.

And stayed for twenty-seven years.

That's how a woman who could read three hundred million years of plant life from a piece of stone spent most of the rest of her life.

In a quiet room.

She died on New Year's Eve, 1972.

Back at home in Swansea.

Emily Dix's nine floral zones are still used today.

And somewhere in a Welsh archive there is a piece of coal with a fern pressed into it.

A plant that lived before the first dinosaur took a step.

And Emily Dix is the reason we know exactly when it lived.

Unearthed Words

In today's Unearthed Words, we hear a poem and a garden memory from the American poet Robert Creeley, born on this day in 1926.

Robert grew up in Massachusetts.

After he lost his father when he was four, he spent much of his adult life moving — from New England to rural France to a farm in New Hampshire.

No matter where he went, he was always writing.

Robert once tried farming.

And he wrote about that hungry summer:

"That was the summer we lived for the most part on chickens and blackberries since that was all we could get hold of.

The garden hadn't come in yet and what we had canned ran out in the early spring.

It was all an idea, in a way, but we were certainly serious — and we were also young enough to bumble along without falling completely on our faces.

There was a smaller garden for the kitchen, close to the house, but the big one was where we had the potatoes, corn, beans, all the vegetables we used primarily for canning."

Robert's poems moved the same way.

In short, powerful lines.

He once wrote:

I think I grow tensions like flowers in a wood where nobody goes.

Each wound is perfect, encloses itself in a tiny imperceptible blossom, making pain.

Pain is a flower like that one, like this one, like that one, like this one, does not remind, does not concern.

Robert wrote for fifty more years after this poem.

The lines he wrote stayed short.

But the feelings stayed large.

Book Recommendation

The Poison Grove by Jill Johnson

This book is part of Garden Mysteries Week.

Which means all this week's book recommendations feature tales of intrigue, plants, and poison straight from the garden.

Professor Eustacia Rose is done with murder cases.

She has a partner.

Matilde.

She has her university work.

She is ready, finally, for a normal life.

But then a murder victim turns up poisoned with hemlock.

One of the plants stolen from Eustacia's own illegal garden.

The Poison Grove is the second book in Jill Johnson's series.

And by now, Eustacia feels like someone you already know.

Brilliant.

Difficult.

And completely unable to leave a poisonous mystery alone.

Botanic Spark

And finally, here's something sweet to ignite the little botanic spark in your heart.

1844 Henri Rousseau was born in Laval.

Known as Le Douanier.

The toll collector.

By day, Henri worked the Paris city gates.

But he spent his free hours at the Jardin des Plantes.

There, he stood for hours in the glass hothouses.

Orchids dripping overhead.

Palms arching in the humid shadow.

Ferns curling tight against the Paris chill.

Though he had never left France.

And had never seen a jungle.

He had stood inside those rain-streaked glass rooms long enough to feel what a jungle might want.

That's how he could return home and paint them.

With enormous, impossible greens.

Tigers mid-breath.

And every frond thick with elsewhere.

When Henri called them his Exotic Landscapes, the formal art world didn't know what to do with him.

Of course, they mocked him at first.

But Henri kept on painting.

And while there were twenty-five jungle scenes that made up his work, every one of them was built from memory.

Through greenhouse glass.

And whatever the light did on a rainy Sunday in Paris.

When Henri died in 1910, he left behind a world no one else could have invented.

Because it came entirely from what he loved.

One heated room.

One afternoon.

One window full of impossible green.

Final Thoughts

Vita named something most gardeners know but rarely say out loud.

We fall out of love with plants.

Not because they changed.

Because we did.

One season — obsessed.

The next — done.

No reason.

No warning.

And sometimes, years later, we come back around.

And that's what Vita noticed on this day, over seventy years ago.

Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener.
And remember, for a happy, healthy life, garden every day.

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