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  • The Path That Leads Nowhere

    The Path That Leads Nowhere

    **THE PATH THAT LEADS
    NOWHERE**

    THERE’S a path that leads to Nowhere
    In a meadow that I know,
    Where an inland island rises
    And the stream is still and slow;
    There it wanders under willows,
    And beneath the silver green
    Of the birches’ silent shadows
    Where the early violets lean.

    Other pathways lead to Somewhere,
    But the one I love so well
    Has no end and no beginning—
    Just the beauty of the dell,
    Just the wind-flowers and the lilies
    Yellow-striped as adder’s tongue,
    Seem to satisfy my pathway
    As it winds their scents among.

    There I go to meet the Springtime,
    When the meadow is aglow,
    Marigolds amid the marshes,—
    And the stream is still and slow.
    There I find my fair oasis,
    And with care-free feet I tread
    For the pathway leads to Nowhere,
    And the blue is overhead!

    All the ways that lead to Somewhere
    Echo with the hurrying feet
    Of the Struggling and the Striving,
    But the way I find so sweet
    Bids me dream and bids me linger,
    Joy and Beauty are its goal,—
    On the path that leads to Nowhere
    I have sometimes found my soul!

    By: Corinne Roosevelt Robinson (1861-1933)

    Corinne Roosevelt Robinson was the sister of United States President Theodore Roosevelt. The Path That Leads Nowhere can be found in:

    • Robinson, Corinne Roosevelt. The Poems of Corinne Roosevelt Robinson. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1921.
    • Felleman, Hazel, ed. The Best Loved Poems of the American People. Garden City, NY: Garden City Books, 1936.

    Found on Poem of the Week PotW.org

  • Facebook Post – Ketogenesis and Cancer

    Note: this is a trial of embedding a post from Facebook on my blog.

  • A rose by any other name would smell as sweet

    roses

    Sorry folks, this just in, right before Valentines day.

    Well maybe not. I was shocked to read about the quantities of pesticides used on imported flowers and the damage to the workers in Colombia from this.

    So like most things. We, the consumers, hold the power to make change by not buying the toxic stuff!

    But there are better alternatives, perhaps fair trade chocololate instead. Or there is not in Canada an emerging organic, fair trade flower industry.