Inside The New York Botanical Garden

Emily Dickinson’s Garden: The Poetry of Flowers Opens Today

Posted in Emily Dickinson, Exhibitions, Programs and Events on April 30 2010, by Plant Talk

Mayor Bloomberg, Sigourney Weaver, State Poet Kick Off Exhibition

During her lifetime, Emily Dickinson
(1830–1886) was better known as a gardener than as a poet. Plants and flowers significantly influenced her poetry and other writings, most of which were not published until after her death. The Garden’s exhibition, Emily Dickinson’s Garden: The Poetry of Flowers, co-presented with the Poetry Society of America, illuminates this American poet’s life and work, the connections that exist between her life and poems, and her study and love of flowers and gardens.

The show features a re-creation of Dickinson’s home and garden in the Haupt Conservatory, an exposition about her life in the Mertz Library, and a Poetry Walk, a self-guided tour, with Dickinson’s poems on signs located among the Botanical Garden’s collections, near the flowers that inspired her.

Yesterday, the Garden kicked off the exhibition with Poem in Your Pocket Day. We celebrated with Mayor Bloomberg, Sigourney Weaver, Garden President and CEO Gregory Long, State Poet of New York Jean Valentine, and 5th grader Lanasia McMillan of P.S. 46 reading poems by and inspired by Emily Dickinson. The Mayor even wrote his own New York City version of Hope is a thing with feathers. Live tweeting during the program definitely put a modern feel to the classic poetry.

The Big Read Marathon Poetry Reading and other kickoff events for Emily Dickinson’s Garden continue all weekend.

  • It’s not too late to sign up to read your favorite Dickinson poems. Click here.
  • Bring the family! The Children’s Poetry Garden is filled with flowers and the words of Emily Dickinson. Kids catch the inspiration and then can draw, color, and write their own poetry in a field notebook to take home.
  • In a live one-woman performance, The Belle of Amherst, actress and author Barbara Dana presents the life and poetry of Dickinson.
    Enjoy garden lectures, home gardening demonstrations, tours, and more!

Don’t miss out. The forecast looks great for the next few days, and the Poetry Walk in the Garden is the perfect way to spend a sunny day.

Get Your Tickets

Comments

Michele Krueger said:

In honor of Poem In Your Pocket Day, and Emily Dickinson’s Garden, I offer a poem I wrote about visiting the Enid Haupt Conservatory as a young adult-

The Botanical Gardens Greenhouse

In the foulest New York weather
on a gloomy Saturday-
I ran off to my secret place-
to swoon the time away.

I listened to bright jungle birds,
saw steamy moist air rise-
alone and meditating
in my tropical disguise.

Tall palm fronds came to know me
when the winter winds blew hard.
I wrote love poems upon them-
their native Bronx-born bard.

The Botanical Gardens Greenhouse
made me warmer than words can say-
when I went there alone and lonely
and came home Religious that day.

Michele Krueger