"Though we were in shelter, we could hear the rising wind, for it moaned and whistled through the rocks, and the branches crashed together... It grew colder and colder still."
(Dracula, Bram Stoker)
It was a cold, blustery day; the cold was of the wet, bitter kind; the kind that seems to grasp your very bones. Not even the heat indoors could fight it away. You could feel it seeping through the glass of every window.
The outside world looked dreary, blurred by the wetness and the damp, and the rain's slim slippery fingers tapped on my window eerily, sometimes almost desperately.
By the time the afternoon rolled in the day had changed its mind tenfold, turning itself from rain to snow, and back to rain again. By then the clouds above were as thin as a dying person's skin, and the light it let loose was pale and meagre.
The day was almost spent.
Dracula was made to be read on days like this: when all through the afternoon
the light weens to grey; when the imminent dark of November is only hours
away, and even the crook of a spine is a dark and shadowy place.
No comments:
Post a Comment