The Legacy of a Singular Life

Hazel Almeda Boulton: Collected Poems and Prose

Fiction & Literature, Poetry, Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Nature, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book The Legacy of a Singular Life by Julia L. George, AuthorHouse
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Author: Julia L. George ISBN: 9781452034423
Publisher: AuthorHouse Publication: July 27, 2009
Imprint: AuthorHouse Language: English
Author: Julia L. George
ISBN: 9781452034423
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication: July 27, 2009
Imprint: AuthorHouse
Language: English

Legacy of a Singular Life is a compilation of the poetry, essays and stories of Miss H. Almeda Boulton.If she loved anything it was nature: the innocence of trees, the joy of the bird, the mischief of a squirrel, the mystery of weather, the history of the rock or mountains and seas.She lived her life watching, recording what she saw into her quick, inquisitive mind.Her poetry relates her observations without the frills ofromanticism or obscurity and rings with a clear truth.

Circumstances set her apart from relationships she craved.Those few she regarded as enduring were taken from her at various times in her life.Her strict independence was founded upon the realization that only one person was completely and absolutely trustworthy:herself.This was not a selfish condition.It was all she knew.

She would be amazedto know her writings are of interest.There is much to learn from them and her thoughts and philosophies are valuable lessons to betaught to all generations.

She died at the great age of 96.Her closest and most endearing kin was Mother Nature. She rests in the sanctuary of the arms ofMother Earth with her treasuredancestors in Caro, MI. May God grant her peace and respite. She lived a rewarding and abundant life with fearless exuberance.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Legacy of a Singular Life is a compilation of the poetry, essays and stories of Miss H. Almeda Boulton.If she loved anything it was nature: the innocence of trees, the joy of the bird, the mischief of a squirrel, the mystery of weather, the history of the rock or mountains and seas.She lived her life watching, recording what she saw into her quick, inquisitive mind.Her poetry relates her observations without the frills ofromanticism or obscurity and rings with a clear truth.

Circumstances set her apart from relationships she craved.Those few she regarded as enduring were taken from her at various times in her life.Her strict independence was founded upon the realization that only one person was completely and absolutely trustworthy:herself.This was not a selfish condition.It was all she knew.

She would be amazedto know her writings are of interest.There is much to learn from them and her thoughts and philosophies are valuable lessons to betaught to all generations.

She died at the great age of 96.Her closest and most endearing kin was Mother Nature. She rests in the sanctuary of the arms ofMother Earth with her treasuredancestors in Caro, MI. May God grant her peace and respite. She lived a rewarding and abundant life with fearless exuberance.

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