Little Late November Flower.

in photography •  7 years ago 

Solitary in the woods.

solitary-flower-00-by-photo-deja-vu.JPG

solitary-flower-01-by-photo-deja-vu.JPG

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Let's see whether @cleverbot is still clever :)

Yeah xD how old are you?

Old enough :)

You can't tell me?

November is my month ... :) . And the flower is beautifully delicate :)

I hope the title has double meaning. Otherwise my English sucks :)

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Now it does 😊😊..
Thank you for this November Post 🌹🌹
Your English is very good, @photo-deja-vu .
And your wit and sense of humour , even better 😎

What is your language ?

It's a Slavic language :)

:) :) That kind of proves my connect to slavic lands. As I told you earlier :).... But much to my exasperation, the mystery continues :)
When will it end :) Ukrainian , Polish you ruled out .
Czech ? Slovak ? :)

Czech ? :)

Polish.

:) :) thank you :)

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

A point to ponder -
November Rain is always unpredictable.
November Flowers are always capricious, lone and late . 😎😊

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

I just noticed. Is that a single teardrop on the solitary November Flower ?
How poignant :).
Your photos have a hidden X-factor . Cool !! :)

Very nice photo :)
Your lucky to find something in bloom in this time of year :)
Well in my country that is :)

Thank you. It's nice you noticed.

This one is early or late. It normally flowers in Spring.

Geranium robertianum, (syn. Robertiella robertiana), commonly known as Herb-Robert, Red Robin, Death come quickly, Storksbill, Dove's Foot, Crow's Foot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geranium_robertianum

'Death come quickly' is an interesting name. Today's proper grammar would demand it to be 'Death comes quickly'. Maybe it is a result of traditional names being at ease with grammar or it is a result of old grammar being used. But then it would go like 'Death cometh quickly'. Or maybe the meaning is 'Death, come quickly!'? Or not :)
And now I am pondering the grammar I used in this post :D

It is a magical plant... it has all sorts of effects on people. ;-)

:D :D

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

@leoplaw & @photo-deja-vu - Mystery of "Death, come quickly" & "Death comes quickly" is as follows :) - It is derived from a story of theft of a (fictional) painting of a woman with this flower, by a (real) Mexican artist, María Izquierdo. Chapter Six: The painting was titled "DEATH COME QUICKLY" .
https://gottawritenetwork.wordpress.com/2015/04/13/guest-blog-post-death-come-quickly-by-susan-wittig-albert/