That moment when, despite the calendar, tis neither winter nor spring. |
Dying winter. Sepia world of flattened yellow grasses-- snow artistry having pushed and molded the long, straw-like weeds into a sodden mosaic. Almost black and white world where ink stroke trees meet to brush against heavy grey clouds as they race against the white canvas of the upended bowl of sky. Wet winter's passing: boot heel mark a muddy daiquiri circled in crystallized ice, barbed wire edged with shattered glass ice fragments, spears of ice hanging, daggers dripping death should they release their slippery grip. Winds bluster cross the hills, arguing back and forth, swapping temper and arrogance, coming to blows, fighting the skirl of earth. Sepia, yellowed skins; winter, now ill, dying yet stubbornly holding on, steel-edged chills ripping across the glen, cutting to the core-- and shallow-rooted pine gives in to wind and gravity. A thunderous crack splits twin-boughs. Evergreen no more. Glass-paned ice sheets pushed by wave and wind shatter on the shore: sure sign the door is open for Spring to slip through. Soon. She waits for that low lull, that temperamental debate of superiority to take a breath. A flash of red breaks the cardinal hold. Barbed wire drips water now like sap rising, flattened pine needles are pushed by forces stronger than gravity. Delicate crocus raises its head just as robin bursts into song. Neither quite one nor the other: winter dawdles while spring creeps in. Solstices and equinox planet passings mark celestial calendars. Mother Nature chooses her own time to put Winter to bed; dragging him off like a recalcitrant child. You can hear him howl in the wind. |