Sunday, October 24, 2010

"The same color as the hour"


"The same color as the hour," Merwin says in The Folding Cliffs and that stops me, who notes the color of hours.

Getting up to run in the dark, over the summer, when the sun makes the sky look like mismatched pages out of a Pantone book, each shade graduating to a higher brilliance.

And noting the star-moon shade of midnight, the clear hour, the black separated a bit so it stands out as a backdrop.

The pink hour of sunset, which is the reason to live near or be on the water, the sunset showing off for the horizon, but not cocky, just calm, smiling, sharing its news of hues and saturation and saying fuck separation, I'm just gonna blur/smear them across the sky and let you drink it in. Discuss.

Yes, I note the color of hours. I should maybe keep a notebook of them. My memory is full of these colors: Boone Creek seen through Budweiser pony bottles; the blurring of the Choptank and the sky; the white-yellow licking the greens out of breath along the trails at Tuckahoe; the pink-red-orange of of the hour of sunset on the Tred Avon on our wedding night that carried collective hearts and smiles.

And this morning, as the color of the hour can't be said, can't be pinned down because the color of the minute isn't constant, elusive, slippery--I blame you, Merwin, for pointing out that hours have colors.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I concur! Dusk is known among photographers as the 'magic hour' for its strange half-light properties. See also: charged ions right before a summer storm when the woods are a weird sort of yellowish-green hue (or is it a greenish-yellow?)

A wiser man than myself could probably build a clock that tells time in pantone values. Wouldn't be worth much at high noon, but would be able to tell the subtle differences at dawn and dusk.

At the sound of the tone, the time will be #ffgffh,

TWM