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Focus on Flowers
Show #43: A Gift of Flowers
Lord Tennyson wrote a simple poem about winter:
The frost is here
and fuel is dear
and woods are sear,
and fires burn clear;
the frost is here
and has bitten the heel of the going year
A more cheerful poem was written by an unknown poet
who wrote playfully and optimistically:
I am the little new year, ho, ho!
Here I come tripping in over the snow
shaking my bells with a merry din.
So open your doors and let me in.
Presents I bring for each and all,
big folks, little folks, short and tall;
each one from me a treasure may win.
So, open your doors and let me in!
As we prepare to attend, or host, gatherings of family and friends
to greet the new year, fresh flowers are the perfect present to
give to others and to ourselves. They freshen up our homes and gladden
our hearts. Nowadays the availability of a variety of cut flowers
in the stores year round, is a gift in itself. Even a single flower,
in the depth of winter, is a miracle and a symbol of hope. The very
impermanence of flowers makes them precious. At the change of the
year, in the dead of winter, flowers can enhance our celebrations
and remind us to savor the opportunities a fresh new year will bring.
Time, like a flower is fleeting, but time with family and friends,
like a flower, is precious and sweet.
This is Moya Andrews and today we focused on a gift of flowers.
WFIU
Created and maintained by Michael
Toler
Last updated: Friday, September 3, 2004
Copyright 2004, The Trustees of
Indiana
University
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