“October is the month of painted leaves,” Thoreau wrote in 1862. “Their wealthy glow now flashes around the world.”
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This time final yr, I revisited an 1862 Atlantic article wherein Henry David Thoreau argued that autumn wasn’t getting sufficient consideration. On the time, I famous that fall didn’t precisely appear to be slipping from public consciousness—a visit to Starbucks makes that clear sufficient. However this season, I’m questioning whether or not Thoreau had a degree. Maybe due to the rise in excessive climate all over the world, or the sheer quantity of different information to maintain observe of proper now, my very own private circles aren’t as filled with chatter about apple selecting or foliage as they as soon as had been.
At the moment I’m becoming a member of Thoreau in making the case for fall. In his exploration of the altering colours of leaves, Thoreau makes an statement that has caught with me: “As fruits and leaves and the day itself purchase a vivid tint simply earlier than they fall, so the yr close to its setting,” he writes. “October is its sundown sky; November the later twilight.” Possibly autumn’s crimson hue can brighten the yr that was, serving to us take inventory of a few of the pleasure and marvel inside it.
On Fall
Fall Is within the Air: Pictures of the Season
By Alan TaylorA group of photos of autumn—the perfect season
Autumnal Tints
By Henry David Thoreau
“An incredible many, who’ve spent their lives in cities, and have by no means chanced to come back into the nation at this season, have by no means seen this, the flower, or moderately the ripe fruit, of the yr.”
How Starbucks Perfected Autumn
By Ian Bogost
The pumpkin spice latte has outlined fall for 20 years.
Nonetheless Curious?
- Why leaves change colour: These sensible reds, oranges, and yellows? They’re preparations for a hungry winter, Megan Garber wrote in 2015.
- “An autumn stroll”: “Leaves lie down so frivolously useless / That they’re neither there nor right here / And I stay alive as a substitute / Alongside the yr,” Witter Bynner writes on this 1958 poem.
Different Diversions
P.S.
I just lately requested readers to share a photograph of one thing that sparks their sense of awe on this planet. “After a number of days of rain, my husband was taking his normal stroll by our neighborhood when he noticed this flowerlike mushroom that had sprouted in an atypical pile of leaves,” Debbie Stone, 71, from Charlottesville, Virginia, writes. “It awed us by its magnificence in drab colours and its comfortable mixture of fungus and flora!”
I’ll proceed to characteristic your responses within the coming weeks.
— Isabel