Now comes the shortening of days, the change of light. A need to hoard and treasure the sun whenever it shows itself, peeking, low and slanting, as the planet’s axis tilts and we feel the chill begin to creep into our fingers and toes.
Winter, but not quite. The all-encompassing, enclosing darkness of December is waiting, but in early November there is still the memory of October’s amazing, unexpected warmth, a strange spurt of growth in the grass, a few stubborn leaves still clinging to brittle branches, the last migrant avian stragglers flung onto this remote rock on their flutter south.
This is the dimming of the year, a season without a name, beyond hairst, or autumn, before the grip of winter tightens. The days are long enough to get things done, and if the equinoctial blows aren’t hammering in, you can work outside. As I write, I’m watching the painstaking repair of a drystane wall in the ancient cemetery near our house. It’s slow, careful work, a buttressing of memory, a race against time. A battle against the dying of the year.