
I stopped into a candy shop in Montpelier to buy chocolate Santas for my daughters. We’ve been visiting this store since my daughters were so young I always held their hands downtown. The owner read my book, and we always talk about writing and family and Vermont small town life. Her store had reopened recently after July’s devastating flood. The rain and snowmelt in the forecast hovered around us as I filled a white paper bag with those bright foil-wrapped chocolates. As I listened, I added chocolate pastilles and more Santas, for her or my daughters or me, for the giving or taking, or maybe both.
This week’s rain likely spared this sweet shop, but towns around us were flooded again. In the town where I work, sections of roads carefully repaired after July’s flood broke again.
Yesterday, I spied a folded dandelion blossom in the town green. I squatted down and stared, not touching this brilliant gold in its emerald set. Overhead, those bunching clouds. A balmy breeze stirring over the lake that by day’s end will whet a bitter cold.
Solstice: hallelujah on this spinning planet.
Less and less surprises us as odd.
— Tracy K. Smith
Fascinating you are the sparkle of gold in the coal pile of life thank you for the uplifting story
What a beautiful, hopeful reflection. We visited Montpelier in October. I had always wanted to see it for some reason, maybe just its name. Most of the shops were still closed from flooding and their owners were busily scrubbing, sweeping, painting. It was heartbreaking to watch them miss this busy tourist season. I was touched by the message on the theater marque: Vermont Strong. That dandelion must have believed it.
I appreciate these kind words. Thank you!
Vermont is strong in so many ways. I’m glad you visited my state, even in a challenging clean up time.