October 23, 2006

An Autumnal Anecdote

It was a stunning day in early October, a perfect example of the ideal jour d'automne. The radiant sun shown brilliantly on the radiant leaves, and all was just as any idealist would expect. Longingly, Aaron had gazed at the inviting outdoors, barely managing to force himself to continue his schoolwork. The view through his window beckoned unmercifully, but still he persevered.

When he had finally finished the bulk of his academic allotment, Aaron ventured out into the glory of the brisk New Hampshire day, armed with his camera, to record the splendor. Unfortunately, many of his pictures did not come out as well as he had hoped, a disappointment probably best blamed on the lighting. You see, it was a bit late in the day, and the pale autumn sun was already sinking behind the scarlet treeline. Nevertheless, our hero pressed on, determined to get the best photographs possible. You may be the judge of whether he succeeded.

Aaron first headed toward the swamp behind his house, a place quite full of gorgeous foliage - though not as full as it had been several years ago. The swamp had once been so replete with gold and crimson that it was widely considered one of the seven wonders of the modern Bedford. That was before the beavers. Certainly, the beavers were a joy to watch, and they made the pond a joy to look at; but their diligent improvement and expansion of the dam so raised the water level that all but the highest of trees in the swamp drowned, partially drowning the beauty of the area...but not completely. It was the few surviving maples, still lovely in their loneliness, that Aaron set out to capture in megabytes.




Aaron wandered around the edge of the swamp and along the east side of the pond, snapping pictures as he went.







Presently, as Aaron approached the lawn above the pond, a hideous monster came barreling at him out of the shadows!



His first thought was "So the Hound of the Baskervilles wasn't fiction after all!" and he would have said in spectral tones

"Prophet!" said I, "thing of evil!--prophet still, if dog or devil!
Whether tempter sent, or whether tempest tossed thee here ashore,
Desolate, yet all undaunted, on this desert land enchanted--
On this home by horror haunted--tell me truly, I implore:
Is there--is there balm in Gilead?--tell me--tell me I implore!"
Quoth the mongrel, "Nevermore."

except that his second thought was "Oh, it's no mongrel after all! It's my trusty hound, Kate."




And sure enough, it was!

The End

7 comments:

lis said...

eee hee hee! Balm to my New-England-loving heart...and laughter for my morning! :O)

Susan Elizabeth said...

Wonderful, beautiful, enchanting, entertaining post. The pictures should be framed.

KJ said...

Hurray! I love pictures of such beautiful leaves! Great tale... thanks for updating.

~jenna said...

what a wonder of literary preprotions, and to say nothing of the beautiful dog, :)

Unknown said...

I suppose there is a slight chance that those pictures could compete with mine...;) They're great. And I loved "The Hound of Baskervilles" part. :D

Anonymous said...

those are really great pictures!

Silas said...

Another shutterbug....Great pictures!