It’s Wednesday evening, a little after 6:00. I’m sitting on my deck with the laptop and the sun is still bright behind me. But the temperature is getting cooler. I know the night is coming. There was a lot of wind earlier today but it is quiet and still here now, as if the air itself is a bit tired and ready to sleep.
Our bird feeders are largely empty except for some doves, which are evening feeders. I hear them calling in the distance and sometimes I call back to them. And now and then I see a Cardinal or Blue Jay dropping in for a last sunflower snack before bedtime. The day is closing up for most of the birds as well.
There is just a hint of yellow in the light over my shoulder, the yellow that to me will always be a mark of evening. I love this time of day. And yet it often makes me a bit melancholy. I cannot say why rationally. The feeling is deeper than that, and I have to wonder if it is not some genetic remnant from a time when night was the bad time, the time of teeth and claws and hunger.
Tonight will not be a bad time. I will eat good food and will have Lana here with me. And later, I hope I will write well. I hope, also, that all of you will be safe from the teeth tonight, and that you will have those things around you that give you satisfaction.
Let the night close in. But may it not close upon you.
----
----
The end of day...so different from the morning when anything is possible. On a good day, one can look at something accomplished, a little victory over time.
ReplyDeleteThis is so beautifully written Charles. I was there with you, understanding, imagining, feeling.
ReplyDeleteTwilight is not my favorite time. It makes me melancholic beyond control, I would try to avoid it.
Thank you for your wishes, and we wish you the same.
Artsparker, that's it exactly.
ReplyDeleteOcean girl, for me it's rather bittersweet.
ReplyDeleteI love that, Charles. :-D Is it published somewhere? If not, it should be. ;-)
ReplyDeleteI felt a primeval soul in those words ... a barbarian outside the walls of his cave, a cowboy alone on the prairie, a khan riding without his clan ...
ReplyDeleteHemingway would've been proud, as likely would've Bob Howard. L'Amour, too.
Thank you for that lovely post and benediction.
ReplyDeleteMelancholy, answering doves, and thinking Lana a wonderful artist:
we agree, friend!
Warm Aloha from Waikiki
Comfort Spiral
><}}(°>
><}}(°>
Thanks Charles-had some good inspiration hit while I was driving today-hope to channel it into writing tonight.
ReplyDeleteTyhitia Green, glad you liked. I just finished it this evening. Don't know if I will do anything with it.
ReplyDeleteTy Johnston, the kind of images I'm pleased to have evoked. thanks.
Cloudia, you're welcome.
David J. West, I made pretty decent progress tonight myself and am happy about that.
I had this feeling last night myself, half a world away. For me, dusk is filled with memories of the day winding to a close, the angst of who will do the dishes and where are my pajamas?
ReplyDeleteCardinals and blue jays? How I miss them, along with mockingbirds, hummingbirds, and red wing blackbirds.
Atmospheric. very atmospheric. You know what? You make me imagine a tired traveler dressed in puritan clothing, wielding a sword and carrying a weird cat-headed staff.
ReplyDeleteAnd then, when he asks you for shelter this night you answer:
"Sure, old friend, you're late"
(btw, i like more night hours. Not so burning like day.)
Excellent piece of prose. Felt like I was there on the deck with you.
ReplyDeleteOddly enough I was cool until about 10:15 when a young friend called in sheer panic because she had a feeling that something horrible was happening to one of her friends. This person was going down the list to make sure nothing was wrong. I normally would not have returned the call (I let it go to voice mail) but I did and was able to at least get rationality back on track. So yeah in it's own way it was a bit strange of a night.
ReplyDeleteright on, charles...
ReplyDeleteas a kid, i was not a fan of night... after i realized no light is possible without dark, i fully embraced both... all part of the yin/yang....
Mary Witzl, we get all of those in our yard, though blackbirds only once in a while. Yes, that feeling is very human.
ReplyDeleteDeka Black, and would his name be Solomon Kane? :) I recognize old SK.
G, sometimes the deck reall inspires me. SOmething about being out in the air, feeling the life around me.
Mark, rationality is often hard to come by,and night doesn't help.
laughingwolf, I largely became a night person in grad school because of how I worked. it's the transition thing that creates the emotions in me. I love transitions and yet they are fraught with emotions.
I love allusions to a primeval night. Interesting counterpoint to the mellow mood of the rest of the description.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy that magic hour wholeheartedly. I've become slightly less nocturnal than I was ten years ago, but I'd still rather see the sun go down than watch it come up.
ReplyDeleteOh yes, those words could pull one in, beautiful.
ReplyDeleteI hope your evening ended the way you wished for!
I love hearing the Angelus bells at six o'clock in the evening. I still haven't figured out where all those bells are ringing, but from the volume of their sound there are quite a few around my neighborhood.
I remember singing as a child, "Oh how lovely is the evening, is the evening,
when the bells are sweetly ringing .... "
Btw, your Klingon gahk comment was the second time today that Star Trek crossed my screen. Serendipity.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful piece of writing, Charles! I also like the night closing in, but you're right, it does feel a little melancholy at times. The time for dinner and reflection. Here's to staying away from the claws . . .
ReplyDeleteTom Doolan, I like those kinds of contrasts and juxtapositions. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteAvDB, I probably would rather too but I see it come up at least three times a week during the school year as I get up to go to class at 6:00 in the morning.
Merisi, I heard those bells when I lived in Fayetteville, but most of my life I've lived too far out in the country to hear them. They are lovely. LOL about Star Trek.
Michelle, definitely. I'm reading your novella by the way. Just got started.
I love the way you described the scene.
ReplyDeleteI don't really mind evenings--although there is a sense that something's ending as the sun goes down and it gets cooler.
I am most melancholy in the morning. Almost every morning. It goes away once I get up. Usually. Twilight actually soothes me. I don't expect much of myself at night.
ReplyDeleteIt is a great time, the twilight. You describe it so well, I feel peaceful in the reading of it.
ReplyDeleteYes, yes. It was him, of course ;)
ReplyDeleteThe Golden Eagle, definitely so.
ReplyDeletepatti, hum, that's kind of intersting. I like mornings and often say I wish I saw more of them.
Carole, thanks, glad you liked.
Deka Black, thumbs up.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteIndeed, as dusk approaches in warm glows that belay the cold that is the northlands cloak, I feel the hunger as it scythes in increasingly sharp arcs of bestial urgency. The night time is not far away; the light will sleep, but it will not die. It will rise again, with or without us to witness its new burn.
ReplyDeleteGood thing mom just called, steaks on the barbecue. God bless her and all mothers. And you as well for writing this wonderfully evocative bit of prose.
Nice imagery . . . there is definitely some melancholy brought in by the dusk. The high decibel noise of my children keeps it from entering my home
ReplyDeleteeric1313, that was cool man. Definitely a polished little gem right there. Thanks for sharing. (I'll have some steak too.) :)
ReplyDeleteDanette Haworth, yes, children are a shield against melancholoy
It's windy and rainy here tonight. I'm glad to be inside. Very nice post! I especially love the last two lines.
ReplyDeleteBarrie, thanks. Glad you enjoyed.
ReplyDeleteI liked this a lot. I would like to get out on my deck at dusk far more often than I do!
ReplyDeletePaul, I know. I find myself missing more time on my deck because of the pressures of work. I'm starting to regret that more and more
ReplyDeleteBeautifully put, Charles... Beautifully put.
ReplyDeleteWhy do I hear a "Muahahha" echoing in a dark empty room? Very cool, Charles. This would be neat to hear read out loud. I like it when you talk about the birds at the feeders (and Lana's pics are always gorgeous).
ReplyDeletehehe... only a bit of polish--fixed a glaring typo! Can't have that even in a response lol.
ReplyDeleteGood writing is inspiring, and I'm glad I can still be inspired.
Steve Malley, thankee, man.
ReplyDeleteJodi, there's always an evil laugh where I am involved.
Eric1313. It's always good to know. :)
I felt the peace and relaxation from your prose. I did not have the kind of feeling on Wednesday, but I do this evening as the weekend is here.
ReplyDeleteIf it weren't for the doves, I would have thought you were talking about baseball (Cardnals, Blue Jays, etc.).
ReplyDeleteIt's interesting, because twilight's perhaps my favorite times of day, too. For some reason, it holds some deep dark mystery that's worth solving.
If there is a melancholy about twilight, I would wonder if it's for the same reason why yellow lights annoy us. Twilight's neither dark, nor light. It's brief and mercurial--just when you get used to it, it changes, or goes away. It's ambiguous.
Nice description of the day's end. I love the "shoulders" of the day--dawn and dusk. And the birds! I hope your evening was blessed.
ReplyDeleteVery cool post, baby. I felt like I was out on the deck with you.
ReplyDelete"When to the sessions
ReplyDeleteof sweet,silent thought..."
Travis Cody, even as I wrote that peaceful piece, some things not so peaceful were happening. Sigh.
ReplyDeleteX. Dell, I neve thought about the Baseball connect. And I'm not sure about Twilight either. It really is an emotional feeling I get, sometimes very strongly. But I'm sure it's not universal. I like the experience of twilight. It's the emotions that are bittersweet.
sage, was up before dawn today and thinking how nice it was out. I would like to enjoy them more.
Lana Gramlich, thank you sweety.
ivan, yeah, what you said. :)
Charles, the night brings me no fear and never has. I like the comfort of dinner and tv and finally unwinding.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful, wonderful post, Charles. I totally understand the feeling. But I love evenings and nights - I guess I like their mystery...
ReplyDeleteSimply wonderful.
ReplyDeleteJodi, spoken as a typical night owl. :)
ReplyDeleteVesper, I do like nights a lot too, and evenings, although I go through that little melancholy phase.
Jennifer, thanks, I appreciate that. :)
Beautifully written and heartfelt, Charles. I love that golden light of evening stretching long shadows across the world.
ReplyDeleteCandy, the deck inspires me about everytimg I go out there.
ReplyDelete