Glance out a northern window and Winter suddenly beckons, just five days after Solstice, begging me to think again on my habitual dislike. The marble-white stratus above looks as soft as a woolen blanket covering all the strange things outside this world's sky. A vacant calm descends. And I am content to be quiet as the scene outside, Bucolic and static as A winter scene by Brueghel. I trace the bare branches that weave all around, seeming to huddle near closed and shuttered houses. They emit a silent desire to be known, uncovered, naked models to the season and sharp as a line drawing. All the stillness leads to reflection on the world we forget in summer, the hidden moles and groundhogs, insects that no longer irritate, allowing us to cease effort and sit at the table in the sun, eating stew and drinking mulled wine. But those of us who are curious walk in the snow, hearing sounds we never noticed: the crush of crystals, the crack of frozen branches. Or when the snow falls, there is a softening quiet, a restful pause in the air and we are entranced, standing to listen without effort, to the soundless sound of mind without thought, of Winter.