The most beautiful and stirring twilights of the year arrive in November. We say that to one another at the end of the first shortest day of the season, the surprising day after turning back of the clocks when the five o'clock close-of-day routine suddenly begins nearer to four. Even after a wild day such as this one, when for an hour or more this morning a driving snow fell sideways, product of a northeaster steeper in its plunge into low pressure than predicted locally and so arriving with a sort of unexpected hurricane punch this weekend. That freight-train scraping sound tearing through the house at one point in the late afternoon was made by the wind loosing a porch chair and dragging it across a wood floor to toss it down on the front garden. The wind thought that would be fun.
Meanwhile
the clouds parted for a golden sunset, offering a deeper pink in the western sky than
we've seen since I can remember. It turned deeper still, minute by minute, painting a rose window
in the quickening alchemy of November skies.
The end of
daylight savings time is the trumpet blast that begins the dark season in the
northern hemisphere.
Savoring what we had, for as long as we still had it, we
drank in the last of October foliage, picking a mild day last week to pay a
visit to the Arnold Arboretum, Harvard's arboreal fantasy land in a rolling
piece of baronial property on the edge of the Jamaica Plain neighborhood in
Boston.
All season
we watch the perennials flower display in turn, the spring reveille of bulbs and the low spreading
violet-tinted groundcovers, the quick burst azalea, rhododendron and peonies, June's burst of
bloomers, the lush lilies of July, the somewhat more muted and yet wilder
blossoms of late summer and September, and the last lunge of mum and aster and
spotted purple toad lilies in the month just ended -- but, truly, October belongs
to the trees.
The
perennials are all but finished, though sometimes our roses last into December, and I
don't know what will remain of the potted annuals after the storm that greeted
the first two days of this month. The prospect of freezing temperatures by
early tomorrow morning drove me out in the night winds last night to rescue the
house plants from the danger of overstaying their summer vacation out of doors.
But,
frankly, this time of year is about the trees. We usually visit the Arboretum on
a weekend, so our weekday stroll reduced the number of fellow visitors and gave us a
different view of this well-groomed playground. We saw the staff out, riding the foot paths in their
vehicles, one man even using a leaf blower (destroyer of rural peace) to clear the ground under a shrubby
little tree near the visitor center. Others gathered up brush or previously
trimmed branches gathered into piles by the roadside. It was like visiting a mansion arriving in time for the vacuuming.
People watching is always good there, even on light days. We saw fathers keeping watch over very small children.
A woman walked six dogs at once, each on separate leads. Each groomed
canine kept perfectly to his lane, but I had to wonder how much fun this was
for the dogs.
We saw a
giant maple (top photo) round outward in a perfect expression of its innate drive for space and air
and sunlight. The tag named it a "painted maple," but the paint had
yet to be applied to leaves that were still green.
On the
arboretum's "Evergreen Trail" we saw tall and stately spruces standing their
ground, including a huge Canadian spruce (second photo down: a Mountie or two could hide behind
it) and a grand Asian spruce (third photo) well over a hundred years old.
Another
evergreen, the golden larch (fourth photo), in fact lives up to its name, spinning its needles into gold each autumn.
And the ginkgo tree (fifth photo down), a product of northern China, Korea and Japan, turns a pale
yellow bright as any spring or summer flower.
Then there
is that shrub, or small tree, whose name I can never keep track of, that
produces a full wardrobe of soft violet foliage (bottom photo) I cannot even describe. We've
seen it in other well-tended properties, grown and maintained especially for its
winter-long color.
Back home with the calendar page changed, we know
where else to find color this time of year, even when the last of the trees
shed their leaves. In the sky.
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