In a moment of ecstasy, on top of a hill, I notice a leaf of grass, and think I must never have seen one before,
So tall and firm, a ballast of the sky,
Bending, twisting, turning, but never breaking,
Its courage never wavers, its resolve the epitome of perfection,
I think it must be the proudest thing I know,
It mocks me for being so nearsighted, for not seeing it before,
It calls to me with a light whistle, beckoning with its lone finger,
Tempting me to enter, promising to whisper its secrets in the wind,
But only if I am ready to listen.
I say to you friend, tread lightly! the grass is not your doormat, to be stomped and stepped on as you please, to drag your muddy feet across in your haste to somewhere else, for where else could you be going but here?
No, the grass is nature’s red carpet at the entrance to enlightenment, greeting those who would dare enter.
O-to be a leaf of grass!
I think the grass might be wiser than all,
Certainly more poised than myself,
What I see in the grass I find everywhere,
In the grandest river to the exiguous stream,
From the sprawling forest to the exalted mountain,
Between the vast plains and the humble prairies,
Amidst the lakes, brooks and ponds,
Among farms and country sides to cities and metropolises,
Under the great wide firmament and between the heavenly cosmos,
From the smallest nation to the most glorious continent,
Encompassed by the most wretched animal and most exalted human,
All connected by the universal truth,
What was still is, and always will be,
This is the secret the grass tells me.
I ask you, how many people feel unlucky to die?
Do these same people consider themselves lucky to have been born?
I say that both are to be anticipated equally, and disregarded just same,
The grass does not cower from the blade, for it knows it cannot die,
The grass gives no thought to time, for time holds no weight for it,
Nor does it fear winter’s icy hand; no, it does not even shed a tear,
Rather, it embraces the twilight and withers proudly,
Death is but the winter of our lives, always to be followed by the spring, which precedes the winter.
O-magnificent leaf of grass!
How gracious to remove the power of the blade!
How wondrous to live forever!
To enjoy your time in the sun, knowing there is no moment, no time more perfect and splendid than this.
Do not spend your life fearing phantoms,
Stand tall, blow in the wind, do not fear the blade,
This is the secret the grass tells me.
