Lost and found is my eureka! blog, my rediscovery of my short fiction and poetry submissions published in literary magazines and university literary journals some decades ago. Interspersed, occasionally, with more recent, hitherto unpublished pieces.
Above, a wide, deep wash of blue. Not a wisp of cloud to mar this day's stunning perfection. This was today's message to us. Frigid temperatures reign thanks to the absence of cloud trapping scant winter heat below.
We are lashed by the icy fingers of winds in high dudgeon, knocking the heads of the forest trees and slicing its fire across our revealed flesh; eyes weeping, foreheads frozen.
Dried flower stalks bow in humble homage to the insistent, imperious wind. Gossamer veils of snow languorously part from laden spruce boughs.
Oblivious, in their winter element, the minuscule, dainty black, grey and white shapes of chickadees flit from branch to branch, calling their delight with their environment.
The creek running through our Ontario wooded ravine in this Ottawa Valley is frozen fast, its glaring surface reflecting the sun's serendipitous presence as we lope along snow-padded trails.
We have company this day; silent, elongated, gracefully following, then leading us forward. Our shadows step lively, unaffected by the chill, the ferocity of wind. Brought to life by the sun's life-affirming presence.
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