Tag Archives: Seasons

Spring is nearly year. I do not have any big problems with Spring, except for for some hay-fever (pollen will kill me; stopping to smell the roses is fatal). However, this time that is sports-wise spring-training, March Madness, and school-wise nearly finals and spring break brings out something gloomy in me. I do not need to find outside sources of darkness; I have enough in me, thank you very much. In Autumn and then in Winter these dark eddies can flow and swirl in the long nighttime, which brings about a weird kind of comfort, but in Lent, and then Spring these recesses are filled with sunlight; sunlight that reveals the oiliness of my emotions, thus exposed they overflow, smudging golden neighbors. This is all kind of rebellious sounding in a purple sort of way.

To restate more directly, I hate the sunlight with Vampiric intensity. Impatiently I wait for sunset. I wear black because I want to. I have never felt at home in sun and earth bent colors, such as green, yellow and orange. The sunlight and its glare play with glasses, infant-like–grabbing and smashing what they don’t understand.

Though I will grudgingly accept the sunlight (I do this every year), and relish the summer, the baking days especially, I cling to the rain clouds and night with my grays and blacks. Sometimes I wear red, but that is something else entirely. (Colors for clothes should be like the ocean.) And if I entrance myself with something that is musically, visually, thematically dark–I do so to find solace (sunshine), as if I were talking with old friends. But people miss something glorious about the night. The summernight is wonderful with the sounds that emerge as I lie in my bed writing, and the nighttime in the Fall and Winter is like wrapping yourself in large blanket-snow-rain-clouds-they will all do. And now the clouds are lace that curtains a close-by home, occasionally sweeping back to proffer a glimpse of a beautiful girl.

As Lord Byron spoke with adoration for the nighttime so much better, as in his poem “She Walks in Beauty”

I

She walks in beauty – like the night
Of cloudless climes and starry skies,
And all that’s best of dark and bright
Meet in her aspect and her eyes;
Thus mellowed to the tender light
Which heaven to gaudy day denies.

II

One shade the more, one ray the less,
Had half impaired the nameless grace
Which waves in every raven tress
Or softly lightens o’er her face –
Where thoughts serenely sweet express
How pure, how dear their dwelling place.

III

And on that cheek and o’er that brow
So soft, so calm yet eloquent,
The smiles that win, the tints that glow
But tell of days in goodness spent
A mind at peace with all below,
A heart whose love is innocent.