writings of a writing man
The mist flows down from the moors
It's an operation that needs careful timing. You wouldn't want to do this while the computer is connected to the phone. You see, there's quite a view out there, different every morning, looking over a small shallow valley to the moors beyond. And it's liable to capture you, turning what was meant to be a few deep breaths into an extended "Oh, my!"
It was roiling and rolling all over, forming great clumps and then thinning out again to collect at the low point. There it lay still for a while until wind currents and the rising sun stirred it into action, pushing it back against the hill, fighting gravity to repeat the whole scenario over and over.
Then I went back for a further long gawp.
I could stand looking out at this for hours, sometimes I do. But I was a good little worker and turned back to the chores of the day, forgetting all about it. Just now, as the window has turned back into a blank square, I hooked the camera up to the computer to see what I'd got. The little darling came up trumps as it so often does. That Nikon'd better watch out or it'll get traded in against a new and posher digital. You can't pass chances like this over just because you've run out of film. December 9, 1998 Published in HumanBeams Jan 15, 1999
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