Showing posts with label time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label time. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Time Lapse

Wait.
What?
My last blog post was in April?

How can that be?

Where did the last seven months go???


Lots of places!



Switzerland in May and June and October.



Maine (hellooooo Elvez)



Ohio (bye, bye beautiful brother)



In Georgia and Kansas and Maine, launching MOO





And everywhere, in the next story

Molto loverino,

xxxx




Monday, September 19, 2011

Anatomy of a Sunset


When I'm writing, I'm not aware of time passing and am surprised when I look up and see visible signs of that lapse.   I took this set of pics over the course of an hour while I was also writing. (The yellow globe in these photos is the reflection of the interior light, not an errant moon.)


The photos remind me of successive drafts of a work in progress: the layering and deepening of the story with each draft.



With care and luck, that final draft might be a thing of beauty, rich but subtle?


But then, that is for the reader to judge.







Thursday, August 27, 2009

More Old Time and The Unfinished Angel


This is another old clock I discovered in this cottage we're staying in, in Surrey, England. It has its own special niche, and at first I thought it was a non-working clock, but then discovered two keys tucked beneath it.  It has a gentle tick-tock and a sweet, soft-pitched chime.

Now this one, too, gets wound each morning to start the day. It makes me wonder about who else wound this clock and what other time(s) it marked, and I had the illusion that if it sat for some time, unwound, time could/would stop.

I also was reminded of a chapter in the upcoming The Unfinished Angel, "What is Time?" Here is a passage from that chapter (the odd spelling and grammar are not mistakes; this is the way the Angel speaks):

Peoples, why are they so compelsive, no, what is the word, propulsive, no, obsessive, yes, obsessive! Why they are so obsessive about time, and why they think it is like a cake you can divide into pieces, why? Why they have to have seconds, pinutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years, decades, sentries, on and on, tick-tick, whoosh there goes two seconds, whoosh, two more. What, they are thinking time is going somewhere? Where it is going, I ask you, where?


Listen. You hear any ticking? No. You hear just the world being the world. You see any clocks in the sky? You see calendars on the trees?

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Winding the Clock


One of my favorite morning chores here at the cottage in Surrey is winding the clock.  It feels as if the day is not properly set in motion until I wind it up.  Very powerful feeling, that!