It's quiet and dark in the English Department. It feels as though I'm the only person in the world. Certainly, I'm the only person in the building. I have music blaring from my computer, just to stave off the silence. Currently playing is "Concerto Grosso, Opus 3, Number 4." Beautiful and baroque.
Feeling a little melancholy at the moment. I think it has to do with the onset of the cold. It's already dark outside, and it's only a little past 8 p.m. Being a writer requires a certain solitude. When I'm in the throes of writing, I don't even want to listen to music. I crave isolation.
Tonight, however, I find myself craving human interaction. I went to the gym after work. Went to a counseling session with my therapist. I believe I've been thinking inwardly a little too much this evening. I need to think about something frivolous and stupid.
Anybody got a copy of George W. Bush's memoir to loan Saint Marty?
from Ellen Bryant Voigt's Kyrie:
Snow heaped like a hat, square gray face,
the drift a shawl gathered at the neck--
a mailbox left unshoveled can be the sign,
a spirit crouching there beside the road--
I was at hand. I followed the doctor in:
Go ye therefore into the highways.
Renie had been the warning, months before
the universal pestilence and woe.
We'd had a late frost, a ruined spring,
a single jay was fretting in the bush,
quick blue smudge in the laden spikes of lilac:
it was an angel singing--don't you see:
it might was well have been a bush on fire.
Always good for a chuckle |
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