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I saw her there, standing in the shade of a thicket; birch trees in the failing Autumn. The long grass caressed her; the wind stirred her hair. Lovely she, in the failing Autumn, there, on the cusp of winter. Lightning; storm on the horizon. Green eyes lifted to catch the rain, falling, there in the nearing distance. She breathes in, out, her eyes fall closed as she tastes the air; rain and soil, sunbaked in the past heat of the noontime. Grass, wafting upwards. The trees stir; the shadows of the leaves flit across her form, face uplifted to the rising storm. Her raiment snaps, back and forth; the winds uprising, howling forerunner of the coming storm. Her hair streams back, a midnight pennant, running out all behind her. The roaring of the winds upsurges in its splendor, its howling crescendo reached at last; The trees bend, backwards in the gale, graceful in their dying, leaves torn and scattered, out among the plains, and across the rippling grasses, soaring in the ecstasy of the winds. She stands, there, in the moment before the storm, straight she is, and tall, swaying as the trees wherein she stands, pale in the twilight. The wind howls in wanton abandon, wild and glorious; rain strikes the waiting earth, the grass bends in homage, down before the fury of the torrent descending. The lightning cracks in the darkling sky, the thunder roars in violent time; the storm falls in the failing Autumn; darkness comes in the clouds obscurity, ebon in the raging heavens, and all was lost there, save the wind, and the rain, and the darkness of the storm.
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Sep 20, 2015
Sep 20, 2015 at 10:04 PM UTC
Beauty, and the Coming of the Storm
I saw her there, standing in the shade of a thicket; birch trees in the failing Autumn. The long grass caressed her; the wind stirred her hair. Lovely she, in the failing Autumn, there, on the cusp of winter. Lightning; storm on the horizon. Green eyes lifted to catch the rain, falling, there in the nearing distance. She breathes in, out, her eyes fall closed as she tastes the air; rain and soil, sunbaked in the past heat of the noontime. Grass, wafting upwards. The trees stir; the shadows of the leaves flit across her form, face uplifted to the rising storm. Her raiment snaps, back and forth; the winds uprising, howling forerunner of the coming storm. Her hair streams back, a midnight pennant, running out all behind her. The roaring of the winds upsurges in its splendor, its howling crescendo reached at last; The trees bend, backwards in the gale, graceful in their dying, leaves torn and scattered, out among the plains, and across the rippling grasses, soaring in the ecstasy of the winds. She stands, there, in the moment before the storm, straight she is, and tall, swaying as the trees wherein she stands, pale in the twilight. The wind howls in wanton abandon, wild and glorious; rain strikes the waiting earth, the grass bends in homage, down before the fury of the torrent descending. The lightning cracks in the darkling sky, the thunder roars in violent time; the storm falls in the failing Autumn; darkness comes in the clouds obscurity, ebon in the raging heavens, and all was lost there, save the wind, and the rain, and the darkness of the storm.
Daydreams in a storm.
christian-l-bixler
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Sep 20, 2015
Sep 20, 2015 at 10:04 PM UTC
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