Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Bring Out Your Dead: Yardley Lotus























Anybody who knows me from Perfume of Life knows that cheap, obscure Yardley Lotus is one of my all-time favorites. If you've never had the pleasure of meeting it, you have missed out on one of the best mass-produced drugstore scents of all time. It's long dead now, sad to say, though bottles do show up on eBay from time to time. Imagine a softer, drier version of Ava Luxe Lotus, and you'll have an idea of what it's like. I've got a stash that should be sufficient to last my lifetime, and I'm sure I'll wear it until I'm ready to exit the planet. In fact, I'm considering leaving instructions that my carcass be lightly spritzed with it at my funeral. It's the perfect funeral perfume, as I discovered when my father died a few years ago.

My father had been sick for years and showed every sign of enjoying a long, lingering decline, but in his usual contrary way, he surprised us. He fell ill one evening, and died alone in a hospital bed two days later. (We had a funny/sad/excruciating final encounter, which you can read about here.) Things were a little confused and hectic after his death--I supposed that's always true--and I never gave a thought to what to wear to his funeral until it was time to get dressed for it.

My father had an infuriating habit of passing harsh judgment on women's looks. No female, including me, was exempt from his snide comments. Standing in front of my closet, pondering my options, I briefly considered wearing something shapeless and comfortable, just because he would have disapproved. My inner adolescent felt the need to have the last word. Then I thought better of it. Humoring the dead is a much better strategy, since you can feel magnanimous without actually providing any satisfaction to your opponent.

I chose a black silk skirt, a dark blue velvet blouse and black suede pumps. I added an antique silver necklace and a pair of faux jet earrings, Victorian drop style. I looked nice. Dad would have thought so, too.

I surveyed the perfume shelves. This was a much tougher choice than the clothes. Not because of Dad--he had no particular opinion on perfume, or at least none he ever expressed around me. The problem was that I really wanted something familiar and comforting to get me through the next few hours, but I knew that whatever I wore would be permanently joined to my memories of this day. I'd be altering my relationship to the scent forever.

My eye fell on the bottle of Yardley Lotus. I knew the fragrance would be perfect: feminine, calming, subdued. It would make me feel better, and likely have the same effect on the people around me. I picked it up, then put it back. Only a fellow perfume nut could understand why fear made me dither. I imagined years ahead when I would never be able to smell that sweet, mild scent without flashing on my father's corpse in the coffin, the sound of my mother crying, the tense tedium of Catholic death ritual. I would be surrendering my uncomplicated pleasure in the scent to all that sadness.

The little sacrifice seemed necessary and inevitable, so I reached for the bottle. It was, in a way, a gesture of reconciliation to my father. Even though it would have meant nothing to him, I felt I was offering him something I valued, a farewell gift.

The funeral passed in a blur. I sat next to my mother, who didn't speak at all, except to say, "He was so tormented." There was a large spray of yellow roses on his coffin, which I had arranged because he liked yellow roses, but they looked ugly to me against the gray casket and I wished I had chosen something else. The priest came over to us and said something I can't recall. The burial was in the tiny cemetery next to the church, and seemed to take forever. We had to brace ourselves against the wind, which was blowing violently out of the south.

The perfume was there through it all, wafting up to me like a consoling friend. I had never thought of it as a spiritual scent, but it was spiritual in the midst of all that ceremony. There was a subdued, warm light in the church, and the perfume became golden to me--a quality it retains to this day.

I was right about the fragrance being permanently marked by the sadness of death. It's scarred now, imperfect, but no less beautiful. It has a richness for me it never had before. There was a time when I might have outgrown it, moved beyond it, but that won't happen now. It's inscribed with a piece of my life.



Illustration from Flora de Filipinas, Francisco Manuel Blanco, circa 1880. Image from Wikimedia Commons,

18 comments:

chayaruchama said...

Sweet Jesus, Gracie.
I got chills.

Anonymous said...

Worth the wait. That's all I can say with such a lump in my throat.

Mary said...

...and now, I'm crying in my coffee. What a beautiful post. Thanks, M.

indieperfumes said...

The honor you show through perfume and beauty does you and your father great credit.

indieperfumes said...

I've tagged you. I hope you don't mind...please see my post today, it comes via Olfactarama via Perfume Shrine...

BitterGrace said...

Thanks, everybody. I'm glad to have friends who don't mind when I spill my guts this way ;-)

And thanks for the tag, Lucy!

Cynthia said...

A beautiful, spiritual post.
I've read your words twice and
they put me in a trance.

Anonymous said...

You wouldn't happen to know the actual notes for Yardley Lotus, would you? You can't find it anywhere. I'm assuming, well, Lotus is among them, but perfumes are more than one-note deals, so...

BitterGrace said...

I'm afraid I've never seen a list of notes. I spritzed some on a few minutes ago so I could consider the question. I smell lotus, sandalwood, something faintly citrusy -- bergamot, maybe? It's a dry lotus, not swampy like some (though I like swampy). You're right about how hard it is to find. Occasionally, a very old bottle will come up on ebay or etsy. There's an interesting review at Basenotes that says men used to wear it, as well as women, which doesn't surprise me. (Obviously, I disagree about it not being citrusy, :-) ) http://www.basenotes.net/ID26134180.html

Anonymous said...

Thanks for responding to an anon comment by the way. Very late in getting back to to this. I'm actually male and in my early 30's which probably doesn't sound like the prime demographic to be interested in this topic, but...when I was growing up my parents had these hand soaps that were always in use in the washroom, and they were Yardley Lotus scented. As in that's literally what it said on the packaging, and the graphics on the packaging matched what I've seen the perfume bottle/ads looked like. I don't know where they were getting them from. I still have one in my possession, but I'm not going to use it. Anyway, the scent is now emblazoned in my brain. I've also grown up into someone obsessed with fragrances(6'4' 200+ pound guy who works on car detailing, loves sports and is *obsessed* with scent notes, and aromatherapy and fragrances lol)Hence my interest...

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