My wits are not sufficiently lively to produce any of the several essays which I've been mulling. Today, after nearly 5 months of negotiating and revision of contracts, the closing on the sale of the spec house took place. We had to concede in a time of diminished market what we had hoped would be a retirement "nest egg" and took a 5 1/2 acre parcel of land in the next town as partial down payment. So, rather than a feeling of celebration, there is only a weary sigh of relief that the sale was at last realized. [The young woman who manages home mortgages for our bank was at the closing and suggested that perhaps we might all sing the Hallelujah Chorus to mark the long-awaited event!]
We were home from the closing just before noon, a bit out of step with the usual order of the day. J. is contemplating a renovation to this 3 year old house---opening up the area in the rafters to create a second story space. As he was explaining his plans, M. our son-in-law, came in to chat for a moment and we all stood looking out the dining room window toward the pond, which sparkled under a coating of glassy ice. M. spied our daughter's beloved but incorrigable tiger cat, Tarbaby, stepping daintily across the ice. He shouted at him through the window and hurried out, while we watched, expecting the ice layer to collapse under the cat's weight. He made it to the other side of the pond, completely unflustered, and sauntered beneath the old willow to terrorize unwitting birds. A cat with a prounounced death wish!
My creative efforts lately have involved an extra hour per day at the quilt shop as we try to ready our boss for "Cowboy Christmas" upcoming in Las Vegas the first week of December. At home I'm scrambling to complete a queen sized quilt before the cut off date next week, after which our long-arm machine quilter will not promise returns before Christmas.
J. has finished the side entry roof construction and is awaiting the delivery of the few sheets of metal to cover it. I arrived home from work to find him in a flurry of cleaning the attached garage. I climbed over tools, coughed on the cloud of sawdust and tracked in grit which he was energetically attacking, squeezed around the large table saw parked in front of the door and entered to the welcome of the cats and the promise of hot tea.
As a literary offering, here is another excerpt from Rowland E. Robinson's "In New England Fields and Woods", from the centennial edition published in 1937. Long, intricate sentences, but words that create a recognizable picture for those of us who observe the nuances of seasons and days.
November Days
"In a midsummer sleep one dreams of winter, its cold, its silence and desolation all surrounding him; then awakens, glad to find himself in the reality of the light and warmth of summer.
Were we dreaming yesterday of woods more gorgeous in their leafage than a flower garden in the flush of profusest bloom, so bright with innumerable tints that autumnal blossoms paled beside them as stars at sunrise? Were we dreaming of air soft as in springtime, of the gentle babble of brooks, the carol of bluebirds, the lazy chirp of crickets, and have suddenly awakened to be confronted by the desolation of naked forests, the more forlorn for the few tattered remnants of gay apparel that flutter in the bleak wind? To hear but the sullen roar of the chill blast and the clash of stripped boughs, the fitful scurry of wind-swept leaves and the raving of swollen streams, swelling and falling as in changing stress of passion, and the heavy leaden patter of rain on roof and sodden leaves and earth?
Verily, the swift transition is like a pleasant dream with an unhappy awakening. Yet not all November days are dreary. Now the sun shines warm from the steel-blue sky, its eager rays devour the rime close on the heels of the retreating shadows, and the north wind sleeps. The voice of the brimming stream falls to an even softer cadence, like the murmer of pine forests swept by the light touch of a steady breeze.
Then the wind breathes softly from the south, and there drifts with it from warmer realms, or arises at its touch from the earth about us, or falls from the atmosphere of heaven itself, not smoke, nor haze, but something more ethereal than these: a visible air, balmy with odors of ripeness as the breath of June with the perfume of flowers. It pervades earth and sky, which melt together in it, till the bounds of neither are discernible, and blends all objects in the landscape beyond the near foreground, till nothing is distinct but some golden gleam of sunlit water, bright as the orb that shines upon it. Flocks of migrating geese linger on the stubble fields, and some laggard crows flap lazily athwart the sky, or perch contentedly upon the naked treetops as if they cared to seek no clime more genial. The brief heavenly beauteousness of Indian Summer has fallen upon the earth, a few tranquil days of ethereal mildness dropped into the sullen or turbulent border of winter.
In November days, as in all others, the woods are beautiful to the lover of nature and to the sportsman who in their love finds the finer flavor of his pastime. Every marking of the gray trunks, each moss-patch and scale of lichen on them, is shown more distincly now in the intercepted light, and the delicate tracery of the bare branches and their netted shadows on the rumpled carpet of the forest floor, have a beauty as distinctive as the fullness of green or frost-tinted leafage and its silhouette of shade."




