Poetry and Pictures - Weather

Paintings by French artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) are often like snapshots of real life. In this painting of Le Pont des Arts in Paris, France there appears to be two cloud types in the sky: mid-level altocumulus clouds and lower stratocumulus clouds with an elongate shape.
Corel

March

They say a picture is worth a thousand words. But just what words?

We'd like to invite you to submit your own poem about this month's featured Weather image. Be as creative and expressive as you can! And check back next month to write another wonderful poem about a weather image.

Clouds
by Emily, age 13, Pennsylvania

You are so dark,
Up in the sky.
You float like feathers
Above my eyes.

As the towns people watch,
With a close eye.
Their light fluffy clouds
Are passing them by.

When rain pours down,
From up so high.
I shelter myself
In a blink of an eye.

I watch and wait,
To see when you’ll end.
For those clear skies
Will roll back again.

It’s by God’s pure grace,
He allows this to happen.
He washes us clean
As pure as His heavens.

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