The Beauty That Remains
“At such moments I don’t think about all the misery,
but about the beauty that still remains.”
-Anne Frank
β
Wishing you all a beautiful weekend.Β π
“At such moments I don’t think about all the misery,
but about the beauty that still remains.”
-Anne Frank
β
Wishing you all a beautiful weekend.Β π
Laughter.
Galloping between warming rays
it echoes through the still
of a quiet afternoon.
Child unburdened, mind untamed,
curiosity insatiable that feeds
her wandering thoughts.
Spring arrives,
ripened with verdant green,
like blossoms unfurling with the breeze
she spreads her timid wings.
Each hour reveals, each day a new age,
boundless fields before her,
pirouettes on a promised stage.
Then you hasten,
remain ahead of her strides.
She pleas for you to turn for her
as she chases each moment elusive.
Years rush like seconds,
seasons shrink to days,
what once sprightly pranced upon tender leaves
now slow to a staggering gait.
Standing alone under winter sun
where golden days fade to rust,
she reminisces of ages past
and of lives come and gone.
Through aches of tears nostalgic
she sees you turn for her.
You take her hand, βItβs alrightβ you say,
βfor a new season now has come.β
Then you guide her tenderly
one final time down the road.
Out of the frost, away from the cold,
and into the mists
of tomorrow.
β
Lines penned two decades ago never felt more true.
May we treasure every day.
By Barbara Leonhard, Featured Contributor
Robert Frost once wrote:
Natureβs first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leafβs a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
Online, one can find many poets who sing about their grief. In this lyrical piece, Frost tells us that we face changes all the time. Eden, our paradise, has been lost. Life is temporary, terminal, and short lived. The sun both rises and falls; the seasons change, and we grieve.
Normal day,
let me be aware
of the treasure you are.
Let me learn from you,
love you,
bless you
before you depart.
Let me not pass you by in quest
of some rare and perfect tomorrow.
Let me hold you while I may, for it may not always be so.
-Mary Jean Irion
β
May we never forget the treasure that exists before us.