
There are no degrees of beauty, no gradations,
only what’s pure and true.
Like Plato’s ideals, reaching down into the infinite within us,
or maybe beauty comes from deep inside and spreads
out into the world—perhaps it is a combination of both,
but I really don’t know.
When you’re alone and suddenly come across snowdrops
in the field or wood, no matter under sun or cloud,
they brighten the day and disposition.
A long, long, time ago, my grandmother took me gently
by the hand to look out a window, sometimes she led me
outside under the brightest moon, to tell me snowdrops
appeared were the light of stars had kissed the earth at night.
And sometimes they appeared with winter’s last snowflakes,
from under a bed of snow, to let us know it’s spring.
She told me to remember, so that I would always know
what’s true.
Stephen Cipot
Garden City Park