
Yes, and in that month when Proserpine comes back, and Ceres’ dead heart rekindles, when all the woods are a tender smoky blur, and birds no bigger than a budding leaf dart through the singing trees, and when odorous tar comes spongy in the streets, and boys roll balls of it upon their tongues, and they are lumpy with tops and agated marbles; and there is blasting thunder in the night, and the soaking millionfooted rain, and one looks out at morning on a stormy sky, a broken wrack of cloud; and when the mountain boy brings water to his kinsmen laying fence, and as the wind snakes through the grasses hears far in the valley below the long wail of the whistle, and the faint clangor of a bell; and the blue great cup of the hills seems closer, nearer, for he had heard an inarticulate promise: he has been pierced by Spring, that sharp knife.
Photo: Gonzalo Barr; Source: Thomas Wolfe, Look Homeward, Angel (Modern Library 1929), at 95
giuseppe | 18-Sep-09 at 4:16 pm | Permalink
Thank you Gonzalo ! for the text and the pic (multigifted you are, I see). Regards.
Gonzalo Barr | 19-Sep-09 at 5:43 am | Permalink
Thank you, Giuseppe, for your gracious comment. I hope all is well.