Gazing into the future is a skill that few possess. The rest of us are left gazing at the present, which often reveals itself in most mysterious ways. One drop of rain, for example, can capture our world like a tiny crystal ball. Or for some, the following pictures may be reminders of the snow domes of childhood. Only that these cannot be shaken, only rotated.
Don't we all live in a bubble? Water droplets on a CD reflecting a street lamp:
Photo:
Image: Paul Sapiano

Image: Paul Sapiano
The image caught in this droplet could be an artwork or maybe the hem of a pretty blouse?
Photo:
Image: Hausstaubmilbe

Image: Hausstaubmilbe
This image of a garden, caught in its miniature form, was flipped so that it looks like a garden snow globe:
Photo:
Image: Bob King

Image: Bob King
Raindrops, crystal balls and the world seen through them have inspired artists for centuries. Dutch graphic artist MC Escher’s works “Hand with Reflecting Sphere” (1935), “Three Spheres II” (1946) and “Dewdrop” (1948), for example, surely remind one of some of the images here.
A colourful flower after the rain with drops reflecting what could be a balcony:
Photo:
Image: Emran Kassim

Image: Emran Kassim
Window to the world - a yellow flower with the droplet reflecting it and its environment:
Photo:
Image: Spisharam

Image: Spisharam
Those who know Belgian surrealist Rene Magritte’s painting “Golconda” (1953), in which tiny men in suits and bowler hats seem to rain from the sky, will enjoy the next photograph.
So the next time you get caught in a spring shower, watch for the beauty it brings along. This leaves us to end with the words of someone who brought beauty to the world, with his words:
“I to the world am like a drop of water
That in the ocean seeks another drop,
Who, falling there to find his fellow forth,
Unseen, inquisitive, confounds himself.”
That in the ocean seeks another drop,
Who, falling there to find his fellow forth,
Unseen, inquisitive, confounds himself.”
-- William Shakespeare
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