Tag Archives: nature

At My House

photo by Sylvia

At my house, there are books. There are open books, stacks of books, groupings, families, renegades. There are plants and flowers; dried and fresh flowers, long leaves in vases, old pottery with lavender. You may find sticks on the table, or maybe a rock, a wing, pens and pencils, a lipstick, a moth. 

There is an old hand-made quilt with a tiny rose print and there is art. Some is mine and some is not mine. There is chocolate and Spanish ham, cheeses, fruit, sometimes wine, sometimes good dark beer and sometimes whiskey. There are little statues of birds and fawns. There is music from the 60’s and 70’s and 90’s; occasionally opera, or Gregorian chants, mostly folk, rock, country, classical guitar.

At my house, there are candles and incense. There is a stained glass lamp with ruby spiders and there are hurricane lamps and sand dollars. 

What is your safe place? I was asked recently—and I answered, “my house”.

photo by Sylvia
photo by Sylvia

Bringing Joy

photo by Sylvia

your green eyes and

the way the sun shone through the pink petals—

Rita’s painted egg and two sand dollars on the toy chest,

Queen Anne’s Lace in the wild lane 

where I walked alone on a late summer’s day

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photo by Sylvia
photo by Sylvia
photo by Sylvia

Excerpt from Thoreau

photo by Sylvia

August 1850

As my eye rested on the blossom of the meadow–sweet in a hedge, I heard the note of an autumnal cricket, and was penetrated with the sense of autumn. Was it sound? or was it form? or was it scent? or was it flavor? It is now the royal month of August.

The question is not what you look at, but what you see.

photo by Sylvia

Excerpt from the book: The Journal 1837-1861 by Henry David Thoreau

Things that Fly

photo by Sylvia

butterflies and dragonflies and dragons (admittedly not far since their wings are often smaller than their bodies)

insects and bats and some squirrels (although in a mostly coasting fashion)

planes and helicopters and some pigs (almost never, but who am I to say?)

imagination and time (not exclusively when having fun) and excuses (some are said to not fly, but the best ones often try)

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Excerpt from: The Thursday Murder Club

photo by Sylvia

In life, you have to learn to count the good days. You have to tuck them in your pocket and carry them around with you.

Excerpt from the book: The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman, 2020

photo by Sylvia

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Excerpt from: This Side of Paradise

photo by Sylvia

“I suppose all great happiness is a little sad. Beauty means the scent of roses and then the death of roses.”

from the book, This Side of Paradise, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, 1920

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Excerpt from the book: Vanessa Bell

illustration/photography by Sylvia

Here, where the artist strives to shape, condense and order thoughts and sensations until they take on a form that communicates, is the promise of continuity as opposed to decay, of meaning as opposed to senselessness, of value as opposed to waste. Vanessa painted, not in order to forget anxiety and pain, but in order to transform them into the permanence of art.

Excerpt from the book, Vanessa Bell by Frances Spalding, 1983

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