"When everything else has gone from my brain ... what will be left, I believe, is topology: the dreaming memory of land as it lay this way and that." Annie Dillard
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Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Snow on Ice
Yesterday morning we woke to a frozen world, each bough and twig coated and gleaming. By 1 p.m. it was 33 degrees, and I could slide to the corner, where the pavement was wet but not icy. I could run the main road, could see how many trees were damaged during the storm.
Ice is beautiful but dangerous. How much would we pay for such beauty? Not another red oak, that's for sure — but some bent bamboo stalks, I would gladly trade those to walk through such a strange, glittering, dripping world.
A new day now and fresh snow is falling. We have several inches on the ground and, more to the point, a heavy layer on every branch, bough and twig. It's no longer a hard, bright, frozen world, it's a soft, white, feathery one.
But I know the ice that lurks beneath.