c. 1923: Hamburg
DANILO KIS SENDS THE FLOWERS
Mariette's grave was covered with armfuls of roses, white and red, freshly cut pine branches,
chrysanthemums and tuberoses, sky-blue hydrangeas, decadent art-nouveau irises, the flower of lust, hyacinths and expensive black tulips, the flower of night, waxen mortuary lilies, the flower of virginity and First Communion, violet lilacs reeking of decay, low-born rhododendrons, and monstrous gladioluses (which were in the majority), soft-white and soft-pink, saintly, angelic gladioluses with their intrinsic sword-and-rose mystique, all of them together a sign of putrid wealth, of the cool mansions of the wealthy, lethally lush gladioluses watered by the sweat of weary old gardeners, the rosettes of watering cans, the artificial rain of artesian wells, to shield from the elements the lushly morbid growth of barren flowers devoid of fragrance, even fish fragrance, despite their frantically joined, lobster-claw structure, despite the blossoms' waxen wrinkles and the stamens' mock tentacles and the mock spines of the finely honed buds: all that monstrous lushness was incapable of exuding a single atom of scent, not even so much as a wild violet's worth.