Joy is the sweet voice, Joy the luminous cloud–
We in ourselves rejoice!
And thence flows all that charms our ear or sight,
All melodies, the echoes of that voice
All colors a suffusion from that light.
~Samuel Taylor Coleridge
From my hate-the-heat perspective the garden being adorned with crown jewels like these in the collage is one of the few saving graces of a Texas summer. If these flowers had voices instead of brilliant colors, I think that even as buds whose colors had not yet been revealed they would start the day off with soft, murmuring melodies. Then as the day’s flames licked up higher and higher and they burst into bloom, their songs would play on but in loud and bold arias so that the bees, the butterflies, and other pollinators would harken to their lusty, changeling voices. And all the while as the harmonies played on, the insect benefactors would suckle on the tasty fare despite the sizzling sultriness. And I, I would remain the envious onlooker because it is only they and not I who are small enough to crawl down into the gloriously-filled caverns of sweet nectars. Then at day’s end in weariness from performing their noisy choruses and from enduring the onslaught of mugginess their songs would give way to those of the white and silver flowery voices that mingle in with the enlarging and marvelous music of the night. As for me, though saddened by their silence and passing, I would have agree with Barbara Kingsolver who said that “in the places that call me out, I know I’ll recover my wordless childhood trust in the largeness of life and its willingness to take me in” again, another day. Another writer once said that in the isolation and silence of winter one can savor belonging to him or herself. And who knows, perhaps summer allows one to do the same but in a different way, especially when that individual is falling short of being thankful for God’s gifts by fussing about the way they are wrapped.
You(God) turned my wailing into dancing; you removed my sackcloth and clothed me with joy… ~Psalm 30:11 ✝
**All images taken by me in my yard; not all were taken on the same days
Love your pics. Make for a beautiful post.
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Thanks my friend❣❌⭕️
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it is indeed the beginning of a slow death for summer—of which, by this time of year, I can’t say I’m all that sad over as I am sick of hot, sick of humidity and on top of that, everything is dying and drying up—cool and crisp are sitting out on the cusp of our world—yet I will miss the slow and lazy and the lackadaisical of the delightfully slower pace of Summer
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Sadly the dying of summer has not yet started just much of the landscape and ALL of what little tolerance I have for it‼️😁
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Beautiful pictures.
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Thanks Jessica❣❤️
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