Something is coming to New England, in
a very short time. We receive it every year, and if it has not arrived by the time
this issue of the World is published, don’t worry. It will be here soon enough.
You probably are already aware that the ‘something’ I’m referring to here, is
snow.
Snow first appears in the North, each
late fall or early winter, almost in secret. Weather experts tell us, and are sometimes
right, when the first or the next snowfall will happen, but it can still often
take us by surprise. I still remember, as a child in Maine, being so excited to
wake up some crisp late-fall morning to discover that the first snowfall of the
year had come, softly, silently, as I peacefully slept. I always think, that
when that clean white snow first comes, it arrives, as the fog in Carl
Sandburg’s poem “Fog,” “on little cat feet.”
It does not make a sound.
My faith makes me believe that a big snowfall is a sign of
God’s power, in effortlessly blessing, or hindering us, depending on your feelings
about snow, with many tons of frozen water, without making a sound. Our world
meters all of this out to us, one flake at a time, because the land needs the
moisture. It is a medicine which we need, and take, willingly or not so
willingly, each winter. It comes, and it will always come, but you will not
hear it fall.
Rain arrives in the other seasons, and often beats the
ground, splashing into itself, in the very puddles that it forms. It is a sometimes-comforting
sound on the roof, and then it immediately rushes to streams, rivers, and lakes.
It is not the same with snow. Yes, sleet and hail can noisily pound on your
frozen windshield in winter, but not snow. Wind whips around our homes,
vibrating old windowpanes, seeking to enter at any spot that it might, but it’s
not that way with snow. Snow comes, but you will not hear it fall. It then
waits patiently, to fill the waterways when warmer weather arrives.
This winter, go outside during a fall of snow, and just stop.
Don’t talk, don’t look at your cellphone, and for a moment, don’t even breathe.
Be still and listen. You may hear cars, or someone’s cranky old snow blower in
the distance. If you do, even those sounds will seem quieter, more distant, and
muffled, all because of the blanket of white on the ground. Unless there is
wind, the new snow will drop softly, silently, in peaceful stillness, straight
down to the earth. You will see it, and you might feel it on your face, but
love it or hate it, you will not hear it fall.
“Whose woods these are I think I
know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with
snow.”
(Robert Frost)
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