You expected maybe a snow scene? |
From
inside the house, in the night, darkness all around, one feels the cushion of
new snow around the foundations and blanketing the surrounding fields. We
were warned to expect the storm on Wednesday night, beginning at midnight, but
in the dark of Thursday morning I knew before looking that it had not come. The
wind’s sound was unchanged: it swept yet across bare ground. Gusts of blowing flakes came midmorning Tuesday, but little accumulated, and still the cold
wind blew. The forecast was rewritten, moved off another twenty-four hours, and
expected accumulation revised upward.
Waking
around 4 a.m. on Friday, however, I felt the difference immediately. Utter
stillness ... that sense of being wrapped ... soundless insulation. In the
South, I thought, there would be quiet after big winds as live oaks, sea grapes
and palms would cease their rattling, but it would be an empty calm, would it
not? Up North, in winter, here the calm of winter’s first heavy, swaddling snow
is dense.
I
got up for to make my morning café au lait, anticipating the light that would
reveal, in a few hours, a transformed landscape, but for the moment content with my
books, beginning my day’s reading with the final chapter of The Swerve, reading the story of
Montaigne’s copy of Lucretius, of Anne Hutchingson’s translation, and of
Jefferson’s correspondence with John Adams. For the morning, at
least, in the dark with an untouched blanket of snow wrapping my old farmhouse,
I smiled to think of the social pleasures of reading – not only communion with
writers distant in time and space but also contemporary conversations and
correspondence with book-loving friends.
We
are not isolated from one another, we readers. We do not withdraw from society
when we go into our books. We are deeply social.
I
reach for pen and paper to begin a letter to a friend.
* *
* * *
Later.
The snow was not as deep in the yard as I imagined it would be, but that scene (and the one here in town) may change in
the hours ahead. Meanwhile, if you are up here at the north end of the Leelanau County
and don’t usually see The Glen Arbor Sun, stop by and pick up a copy today at
Dog Ears Books to enjoy the article on “Orchards and Orphans” by Kathleen
Stocking. Also, please note that, by Kathleen’s own request, we are running a “blue
light special” (minus the blue lights) on her essay book trilogy: $25 for all
three, if you get in here fast enough! That’s practically like buying one book
and getting the other two for free – and what a great holiday gift for a
special someone on your list!
2 comments:
Sometimes when I take Katie out very early in the morning after an all night snow I feel inside that sense of insulation. The totality yet softness of silence.
Have a wonderful, peaceful holiday up there in the magical north.
Thank you, Dawn. You, too!
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