Saturday, 18 July 2020

Petrichor

The dead good word of the week appears to be  petrichor. If you've been following the posts from my fellow bloggers over the last few days, you'll have read quite a bit about it already, so indulge me in the briefest of recaps for the benefit of all.

It's probable you'd never come across the word before, but petrichor is the name given to that delicate, delicious smell which fills the air as rain showers onto earth. I use earth quite loosely here to encompass dust, rock, soil and stone. It was only coined about fifty years ago by a pair of Australian researchers who, in the best scientific tradition, reached back to the Greek and compounded the words for stone (petros or πέτρος) with (ichor or ἰχώρ)  - effectively the lifeblood of the gods - to make petrichor, a noun perhaps as elusive of literal definition as the essence it describes.

The science - and we all follow the science these days, don't we? - explains that many plants contain an oil which they exude during dry spells. This oil is absorbed by soil and rocks. When rain arrives, an earthy odour fills the air because the water droplets acting on the porous dust, rock (including concrete), soil and stone release some of that oil into the atmosphere along with another substance, geosmin, itself a by-product of bacteria in the earth. Our nostrils are able to detect geosmin in tiny amounts - 5 parts per trillion - and so we breathe in the 'scent of rain'.  Aaaah, petrichor, we exclaim contentedly. A synthesized version of the aroma is now available.


First posited as a fictional brand in an episode of Doctor Who, Petrichor, 'that very special earthy scent created when rain falls on dry soil' is now being marketed by the American fragrance company Demeter as a cologne spray, a roll-on oil, a body lotion, a shower gel and a diffuser. I leave it up to you to decide if you're worth it.

All of this talk about earthy scents and sensitive noses leads me to recommend a novel to you, something I haven't done for a while, but I read it recently and thought it quite extraordinarily good.  The book is question is Perfume by the German author Patrick Suskind. Sub-titled 'The story of a murderer', and described as a bewitching, darkly humorous fable of desire, obsession and death, Perfume was written in the 1980s but its story unfolds two centuries earlier in France.

It's all about one Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, abandoned as a baby in a Paris slum, but possessed of an extraordinary gift - a sense of smell more powerful than any other human being's. He can read the world via his nose and his prodigious gift leads him to create the most sublime perfumes in 18th century France. His obsession with scent also lures him down the path of serial-killing - but I don't want to give more away.

The tale is an absorbing one, the writing is a tour de force, especially when Suskind dwells on the olfactory and the fascinating details about how perfumes are made. The descriptive language is fabulous. No wonder the novel has become something of an international cult read. It has been made into a film as well apparently, but I can't imagine a movie will be able to match the imaginative power of the writing. Anyway, that's my recommendation for this summer's staycation reading.

As for petrichor itself, I thought I'd add to the poems on theme this week with an excursion of my own into the fleeting realm of scent.


Sweet Like Geosmin
Into our stifling hothouse, a hint of change.
Temperature and pressure drop perceptibly
as sky shades yellow, thick with electricity.

This enervation which has heavied limbs
for countless dusty days is surely set to end
when heaven rends, and showers all beneath.

Some find most favour with the moment
lightning strikes, breaking the tension; but I
savour the first patterings of pregnant rain

on desiccated earth. This simple-seeming act
unlocks rich chemistry; attar of parched soil
and plant oil minutely macerated, waft me

your ancestral perfume of regeneration even
as the longed-for deluge arrives, obliterating
heat, dust and lethargy in cool, fresh green.

As ever, thanks for reading. Keep sniffing - safely, S ;-)

45 comments:

  1. Petrichor is a brilliant word! (And a brilliant smell/sensation.)

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  2. Fascinating to read. I never knew that smell had a name (nor any of the science behind it). I love the poem and will aded Perfumr to my reading list. Thanks Steve.

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  3. Beautifully evocative Mr R.

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  4. You're right Steve. That was a new word on me but I've always loved the smell of rained on soil and the science just adds to the magic - nature is wonderful. I loved your new poem too :)

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  5. Wittily written Steve. I had heard of petrichor but didn't know what gave rise to the lovely aroma (not that I'll be buying a bottle of it). Thanks for the book recommendation and of course the Geosmin poem - fab.

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  6. I love this! ❤️

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  7. School playing-fields early July, sun-baked and then soaked with a sudden shower as we fled the cricket pitch for the shelter of trees. That's the smell. Thank you for giving name to it; and another top poem.

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  8. Lizzie Fentiman23 July 2020 at 00:09

    Fair dinkum, Australian research scientists. Let's hear it for Isabel Bear and Dick Thomas. That's another fine blog Steve.

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  9. Beautifully written Steve. Thanks for a new word and the fascinating facts behind it. I've actually seen Perfume (the movie) but now I'm inclined to read the book. I thought your poem was very good and liked in particular 'first patterings of pregnant rain' (great imagery) and 'attar of parched soil and plant oil minutely macerated (for the assonance and alliteration). Well done, I'd say.

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  10. It's such a great smell isn't it? I never knew there was a word for it.

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  11. It's certainly a dead good word and a fine aroma in its place but I wouldn't want to go round smelling of it! That's a beautifully crafted poem. 👍

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  12. Nice one matey.

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  13. Great blog again Steve. Agree with you that Perfume is an excellent read and actually I thought the film (which I saw before reading the novel) stands up quite well. I liked your atmospheric poem.

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  14. Penny Lockhart24 July 2020 at 19:44

    Well I savoured petrichor on my way home from work this evening! What a timely blog :)

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  15. Gareth Boyd Haskins25 July 2020 at 10:52

    Very good Steve, informative and fluent. I love the droll asides and the poem is most accomplished.

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  16. Love the evocative poetry. It's definitely a petrichor-flavoured staycation this summer, so I'll give Perfume a try. Thanks for the recommendation.

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  17. Excellent 👍

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  18. So that's what the smell is. Petrichor. Great blog Steve and another cracking poem.

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  19. Thanks for this. One of my favourite aromas.

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  20. Love the poem Steve 💙

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  21. Thanks Steve,
    I was unfamiliar with petrichor, but very familiar with what it means.
    It is a beautiful smell. Really like the image of pregnant rain - bringing
    me to imagine birth and all things new.

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  22. Beautiful poem with some lovely imagery

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  23. Charlotte Mullins27 July 2020 at 11:44

    What a lovely blog. It's an unusual word (new to me) for an alluring aroma - up there with fresh coffee, baking bread and jasmine at night among my favourites. Your poem is beautiful too. Thanks for sharing.

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  24. Nice one, Steve!

    Hope all is well...In Poland, it is hot & humid, but unlike end of June, early July, we have very little rain right now. Today will be 31 degrees 😎
    Cheers, mate!

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  25. I really like the way you've captured the archetypal (if that's the word) meaning the scent has for us in 'waft me your ancestral perfume of regeneration'. It's a lovely poem Steve :)

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  26. I remember some years ago seeing a snippet on regional TV about a laboratory in Suffolk which specialised in synthesizing odours to order. Apparently you could ask them (for a price, obviously) to try and recreate a favourite smell for you - new mown grass, hot leather car seats, a single malt whisky, whatever - and they would trial it, send you a scent-stick and if you approved, make you an atomiser of the aroma. I thought that was pretty cool.

    I thought your post was great, I love the poem and I'm going to order a copy of Perfume to read. Thanks for the blog and the recommendation.

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  27. Beautifully written Steve. I never knew most of that and as for the poem, it's wonderful.

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  28. For me it is a smell of well-being.

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  29. Malcolm Drysdale29 July 2020 at 22:34

    That's one brilliant poem! Like your said in your blog, aah petrichor.

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  30. Martina Connors30 July 2020 at 13:39

    I've always thought of it as a summer smell, which kind of makes sense from your exolanation that it is most intense after a particulary dry period. I never knew what it was called, or that there was even a name coined for it. Thanks for a great blog and a lovely poem.

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  31. A really lovely blog and poem (nice title for the latter, too). x

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  32. Keep the lovely blogs coming Steve. I really enjoyed this one. I remember seeing Perfume when it was released in the early 2000s - quite graphic and nearly two and a half hours long as I recall - but I didn't read the book as I don't think it works well that way round. I love the smell of freshly rained on soil and I agree with a prior comment that I associate this mainly with summertime so your blog is nicely topical. Typical of our American friends to bottle the smell, that made me smile as did your witty aside about "if we're worth it". What can I say about the poem except it's beautifully written? Well done :)

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  33. Wow. Synchronicity! It's happening right here, right now just as your poem described it: sky going yellow, thunder in the air. I've just opened the windows because it's so hot and am just waiting for the first rain to fall and send that smell wafting my way. I love it when things like this happen. It's a great blog Steve.

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  34. A fascinating theme. This was beautifully written and I love the poem :)

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  35. Kylie Davenport3 August 2020 at 13:18

    So lovely!

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  36. Fabulous blog and poem. 💚💚💚💚💚

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  37. That's so cool :)

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  38. I love this. Never knew what it was or why. Great poetry too.

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  39. That was some electrical storm last night. I was out sniffing the petrichor.

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  40. Pauline O'Rourke13 August 2020 at 17:31

    Could only expect something like this from you x

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  41. You can...Use the words, change them to a picture, make me feel the colour and taste the air! Have a nice evening 🦋

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  42. Fascinating and informative writing and a lovely poem.

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