SPRING SUNLIGHT
byGwen Austin
copyright 1999Ethereal, hopeful, promising more, spring sunlight awakens morning mist obscuring winter's rubble. Spring sunlight casts side shadows among the trees, stripes dark, furrowed trunks, spotlights furry moss and silver lichen. It christens lime-green buds of hazel, cottonwood, alder and blackberry vines. It highlights dingy-green sword ferns edged with rust. Its suffused glow leads the eye to beyond. Spring sunlight on the meadow dances in the crystal ball of a raindrop clinging to a winter-dried wild grass blade. It nudges tightly-curled trillium, hiding at forest-edge, to open its white trumpets. It spurs on chickweed, ground moss, dandelion, thistle into prodigious procreation. It entices robins to dine on groggy worms. Spring sunlight sets my soul aglow. It bids me heft rake and hoe to rout out nature's flora, dubbed 'weeds' by you and me. It propels me to putter on the porch, sweep away winter's debris, scour plastic chairs, repot root-bound bonsai, trim scraggly aubrieta and alyssum, fill the giant strawberry humming bird feeder. Spring sunlight compels me to sit and envision the meadow in full wild-flower array, the beckoning shade of sheltering trees on a hot summer day, a busy birdbath with sparrows, chickadees, nuthatches, robins and rufous-sided tohees at play. But best of all, to pause and dream and create a poem.