The Decorator came last
night,
With buckets of snow white
paint,
With care, He spread it
everywhere,
Exhibiting no restraint.
While people slept, His
brushes swept
The world to which they would
awake,
With skill and speed, He did His
deed,
His job all done by day-break.
A simple scene, pristine and
clean,
At dawn's first early light,
Not
any print, or mark, or blemish,
Disturbed
this awesome sight.
A virgin snow upon the
ground,
Sparkling in the morning
sun,
Dazzling diamonds everywhere,
How
rich had earth become.
A bit of red flew
overhead,
A ruby cardinal on the wing,
It
sought a branch on which to perch,
And lift
its tiny head to sing.
Fine crystal, bead-like
lavalieres,
Hung down from hand-picked
trees,
Making rainbows where they
dangled,
In the sun and winter's
breeze.
A land bejeweled by God's
own hand,
So real to mind and
eye,
But should men snatch those
lovely gems,
They'd surely melt and
die.
Sculptured grandeur in the
morning,
Which might dissolve by
afternoon,
Perhaps, by night, just dampened
spots,
How sad; all could be gone so
soon.
That is, until the next
snowfall,
When the Decorator comes once
more,
And paints the whole world white
again,
More lovely than before
Virginia (Ginny)
Ellis
Copyright March 2007