
Dew Drops on a Spider’s Web – Kay Stewart Photography
This spider’s web, covered with early morning dew – a natural miracle nearly invisible to the naked eye – was in the corner of a flower box on our deck. Kay, whose camera is always nosing around for the things we do not see, took this photograph. The poem was inspired by the smallness I felt – the beauty of smallness – seen in the magnificence if a spider’s web in morning light and in e. e. cummings’ poem “who are you, little i”.
“A Lightness of Being” – Gordon C. Stewart
who are you, little i, sitting above
the world so high (e. e. cummins)
on the high perch home
hammers and saws have made
on land filled and leveled by
bulldozers and gas-guzzling graders?
then i see it in the morning sun
the all-but-imperceptible home
spun from inside a spider self,
wet with drops strung like beads
so small, so delicate, so light
they leave the spider’s home intact,
a natural grace respecting strength
and weakness – a lightness of being
that does not crush or break
this hidden part – this most amazing part –
of a larger Web of life we barely see
This small spider’s web, tucked away in the corner of a flower box on our deck, was noticed by Kay and preserved with her camera.