Jan. 15th, 2006

vaneramos: (Default)


Useful or interesting:
  • acerate, acerose: adj needle-like, as the leaves of pine
  • adhibit: v to admit, as a person or thing; take in; use or apply; administer; attach or affix
  • agene: n nitrogen trichloride; a yellow pungent volatile oil formerly used for bleaching and aging flour
  • agenise, agenize: v to bleach flour using nitrogen trichloride
  • agnate: adj related on the father's side
  • agnatic: adj patrilineal; pertaining to descent by the male line of ancestors
  • analcime, analcite: n a white or light coloured zeolite found in certain basalts
  • anoa: n a small buffalo of Celebes and the Philippines, having short pointed horns
  • apeak, apeek: adj in a vertical or nearly vertical position or direction
  • apod: n an animal lacking feet
  • areology: n the observation and study of the planet Mars
  • astony, (astonies, astonied, astonying): v to stun; bewilder; astonish; dismay (archaic)
  • audad: n wild sheep of Northern Africa
  • aventail: n a curtain of mail attached by means of staples (vervelles) around the base of a helmet, and covering the shoulders
  • avodire: n an African tree
  • azotemia: n uremia; a toxic condition resulting from kidney disease in which there is retention in the bloodstream of waste products normally excreted in the urine
  • azoth: n mercury (alchemical)
vaneramos: (Default)





Approaching the snake bend


Taking advantage of yesterday's deceptive sunshine, I strolled to a place I haven't visited recently. The best way is to follow the bicycle path, which doesn't wind too close to the Eramosa and its seductions. When at last the trail approaches the riverbank I stop and breathe. From there I can wander home distractedly as I wish.

The afternoon was blustery and unpleasant. The park was deserted, with no sound but the clatter and screech of cold branches, and remote hum of the fibreglass plant.

Finally reaching the river and turning back, I approached the snake bend, where ripples through the rapids resemble metallic scales. One day during winter 2001, while grappling with Emerson and Dillard's mysticism, I envisioned a serpentine spirit arising from the stream, but it was only imagination. At that moment, I realized I no longer believed in the supernatural, and have been coming to terms with atheism ever since. Yesterday I didn't stop long, but continued upstream.

On the pond swam two ducks. A fiery flare illumined the drake's head. The female was radiant gold. I was dumbfounded.

Proceeding past, I discovered it had been the sunset behind me igniting their iridescence. They were only mallards.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

The essay I wrote that day, January 25, 2001, was originally posted on the themestream website as "A different beauty from Emerson's", and is now located at Silvan's Glade (Maybe [livejournal.com profile] missprune remembers it. Can you believe we've been reading one another's ideas for more than five years?).

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