About Sue Vincent
Sue Vincent was a Yorkshire born writer, esoteric teacher and a Director of The Silent Eye. She was immersed in the Mysteries all her life. Sue maintained a popular blog and is co-author of The Mystical Hexagram with Dr G.M.Vasey. Sue lived in Buckinghamshire, having been stranded there due to an accident with a blindfold, a pin and a map. She had a lasting love-affair with the landscape of Albion, the hidden country of the heart. Sue passed into spirit at the end of March 2021.
What pretty flowers but very poisonous
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I try not to eat them 😉
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Gorgeous flowers!
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They were, Lisa 🙂
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I love those naturalized daffodil fields. My favorite flowers! They just keep on keeping on…
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They always seem to smile 🙂
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yes….I am literally waiting for my daffodils to peep up above their snow covering from last night, so I can get a photo I hope. I asked my son to avoid disturbing them when he shoveled the walk, and he refrained. stay tuned… 🙂
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Figers crossed 🙂
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I posted some just now…there are more still under the snow
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I had a wander over to see, but haven’t found them yet.
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up now I think. 🙂
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Nice 🙂 Even with the snow they bring sunshine 🙂
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thanks. I love daffodils.
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So do I 🙂
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Glorious!
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As if the sun had rolled in the grass 🙂
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Lovely, Sue. And what an image!
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Thaks, Diana…they were just beautiful 🙂
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I can just picture this beautiful scene, Sue.
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It was gorgeous 🙂
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I love those flowers – just gorgeous. Have you ever seen the daffodil park in Liverpool when it was in bloom?
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No, I have never managed that, but the roadsides here are now covered in daffodils, celandines, daisies, violets… and so many more, all beneath the blossom on the trees 🙂
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Worthy of Wordsworth ❤️
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❤
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Such a wonderful tanka!
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Thank you 🙂
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Lovely poem and stunning picture, Sue. 🙂 — Suzanne
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A beautiful sight to behold and the tanka fits perfectly! 🙂
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You have to love daffys 🙂
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Oh yes ::-)
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Loved the words, ‘Joy dances on slender stems.’ Such a wondrous description of the fragility of nature. ❤
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Thank you, Olga.
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Oh, Sue. Your words are so gorgeous. That is the one memory of England that always sticks in my mind… the woods were filled with daffodils! The green of the grasses was almost florescent and the yellow of the flowers was so brilliant that on a cloudy day the colors were magnificent! Funny how those memories flood back into my brain! ❤
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The greens of spring here are wondeful…the wet winters (and summers!) give us that gift…one we forget with the eternal complaining about the eather. Still, it is a national pastime 😉
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LOL! That is part of the human condition, Sue – to complain about the weather. 😀 Colorado is dry and brown this time of year. Some of the apple and crab apple trees are blooming right now. The pops of color are amazing. ❤
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But we Brits take it to an artform 😉
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LOL! I remember how many cloudy days there were. I will give you that! 😀
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Yesterday it was scorching. Today the heating is back on 🙂
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It is like that here in Colorado, too. It was cold last night and today the wind is blowing (again). The rest of the week looks warmer.
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It makes life interesting 🙂
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