"Toward evening, the clouds lifted and the sky showed a clear pale blue - as if it had been washed clean - and the grass and leaves glistened. Kormt came out of the house to watch the sunset. It was a good one, all flame and gold."
-Poul Anderson, "The Chapter Ends" IN Anderson, Star Ship (New York, 1982), pp. 253-281 AT p. 278.
Andersonian pathetic fallacy:
when mankind has gone, the clouds of illusion lift?;
the sky is washed clean - that is explicit;
the renewed Earthly environment glistens appropriately;
the sunset of mankind on Earth but a suitably colourful one.
All the detail that action-oriented sf readers might miss.
Read everything at least twice.
Starward.
1 comment:
Kaor, Paul!
Perversely, I immediately thought of a far grimmer work by Anderson touching on the idea of a Last Man on Earth, "In Memoriam." Which is not quite a story, more a thought experiment. I also thought of "Memoriam" being naturally a sequel to the dystopian "Murphy's Hall."
Ad astra! Sean
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