Moon-white Hill Glory Bower on Sita Pahar
On Sita Pahar in Bandarban, the hills sometimes seem to speak in whispers—through mist, light, and the quiet rustle of leaves. In that stillness, the eye suddenly rests on a cluster of Bhat flowers—Hill Glory Bower—soft white petals touched with a hint of violet at the center, with long delicate stamens stretching outward like invisible lines written in the air.
The beauty of this flower is not loud, not dazzling. It is calm, composed, and deep—almost as if the character of the hills themselves has taken the shape of blossoms. Against the dark green leaves, the white flowers seem to float, like fragments of mist resting gently on the branches.
On the slopes of Sita Pahar, it feels as though nature paints not with bright colours, but with silence and fine lines. When the wind moves, the slender filaments tremble softly, as if the mountain itself is breathing.
There is a quiet melancholy in the Hill Glory Bower. Though the flower is familiar in village paths and forest edges, under the light of the hills it becomes something else—distant, dreamlike, almost like moonlight gathered into petals.
That afternoon on Sita Pahar, it felt as if spring does not always arrive in flames of red silk cotton. Sometimes it blooms quietly, in the white stillness of the Bhat flower.
Bandarban, Bangladesh
www.alochhobi.net
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