Back home, as I do his blog post, Klaus is near by - his recovery is coming along though slowly. We put on a CD of classical music (through a Dog's Ear
Some work to do now- but I do have writing on my radar for today as well.
I’d like to say that this has been a relaxing and enjoyable three day weekend, but it hasn't. I will spare the details but it has been very depressing and difficult to function for very long with succumbing to the sadness.
I am however going to do a few journal bits form the past, since I’ve neglected to do this for a while.
You say, I think…
The poet Emily Dickinson lived a reclusive life at her family's home in Amherst, Mass., but while she rarely went out into society, she did spend a lot of time outdoors. Dickinson loved nature and was an avid gardener, and now an exhibition at the New York Botanical Garden called Emily Dickinson's Garden: The Poetry of Flowers is putting on display a side of the poet that is little known.
Gardening was a huge part of Dickinson's life and her art. "I was always attached to mud," she once wrote, and a sophisticated understanding of plants and flowers is reflected in her poetry. According to Gregory Long, the president and CEO of the New York Botanical Garden, Dickinson used to tuck little poems into bouquets of flowers that she gave to her neighbors.
{for full NPR story click below}
A Flowering Tribute To Emily Dickinson : NPR