Today’s prompt from Liz in the Five Things class is to list five things that are “beautiful” today. We’ve all heard the saying, “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” What is beautiful to me may not be beautiful to you.
As I think about what is beautiful to me, the first thing I think about is visual beauty–what I see. Today, my list includes the clear blue sky. I don’t know why, but the sky is bluer in autumn than in winter or summer. Everything seems sharper and more delineated in the autumn air.

There are the changing leaves as well. Years ago, I bought some cherries from the grocery store, and we planted some of the pits in the backyard. A tree grew; it’s definitely a cherry, but we have not had any fruit from it. However, every year, though–late February–it blooms. It is gorgeous. It reminds me of the A. E. Housman poem:
Loveliest of Trees
Loveliest of trees, the cherry now
Is hung with bloom along the bough,
And stands about the woodland ride
Wearing white for Eastertide.
Now, of my threescore years and ten,
Twenty will not come again,
And take from seventy springs a score,
It only leaves me fifty more.
And since to look at things in bloom
Fifty springs are little room,
About the woodlands I will go
To see the cherry hung with snow.
This poem is in the public domain.
Today, the tree is not dressed in white, but rather in a deep red as the seasons change. The tree is as beautiful in its autumn dress as in its “Easter” dress.
Yesterday was Sunday, and that is “church day.” There haven’t been many Sundays in my 65 years that did not find me in the family pews in my home church of Mt. Hermon Lutheran in Peak or Macedonia Lutheran in Prosperity. The beauty of the Lutheran liturgy draws me in to corporate worship with other believers–from the corporate confession and forgiveness of sins, to the readings from the Bible, the pastor’s sermon that reminds me of the Good News of the gift of salvation to the breaking of the eucharistic bread during communion. Worship is a beautiful thing.

Last week, my husband and I went to the Great Smoky Mountains for several days and invited my mother to go with us. It was beautiful in the mountains. The fall color was peaking. There were crowds, especially on the Cades Cove Scenic Loop. The towns were commercialized (if that’s even a word), but it was a beautiful time.

I learned some interesting things about my family history from Mama. I didn’t know I had a United States Senator in my family tree! I knew I had several Confederate soldiers–three or four times great-uncles, three of whom died at Gettysburg. I also knew that my Summer ancestor was an officer in the American Revolutionary War. (I qualify to join the Daughters of the American Revolution as well as the United Daughters of the Confederacy!) That ties into what I was watching last night on ETV–the show “Finding Your Roots.” As I listened to the stories of Angela Davis and Mr. Jay (I forgot his whole name already), I understood even more how the past influences our lives. There is beauty in knowing where we come from and who our people are.
Mama and I are planning a “cemetery tour” to trace our ancestors together. That will be a beautiful thing as well–that sharing of stories and history.
I’m not sure I’ve listed my five things, but I’ve certainly “mused.”
