The Winter Of The World, XXII.
After the war, the season is spring:
pre-dawn rain;
glittering landscape;
growing warmth;
vanishing mist;
breeze-ruffled pools;
intensely green grass;
blue forget-me-nots;
changeless pines;
shaking willows;
new leaves on birches;
cloudless sky;
sun, wings and song;
moonhorn bull, cows and calves;
red coats and gleaming crown;
bolting hares;
flying pheasants;
questing bees and dragonflies;
eddying air;
odours of earth and river;
Donya basking naked on a flat stone jutting into the Stallion;
rock glowing against skin;
minnows above pebbles in the river;
lulling current;
a letter from Josserek, beginning at the bottom of the page.
Poul Anderson's descriptive passages are long and detailed and we like to summarize them. Four senses in this one.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteI agree, even if I dislike Donya being at the center of such a list.
Ad astra! Sean