Ugh: one of those mornings when Tom forgot to set his alarm and forgot to run the dishwasher; when I forgot where I'd stored the spare parts for the coffee pot that's not in the dishwasher; when the cat was horrified by rain and kept screaming in and out of the house beneath my slippery feet as I tried to drag trash to the curb in a windstorm. Suburban angst, c'est moi. I should move back to a place with real trouble. I'm getting soft.
Anyway, here we are at Friday again: first day of November: mild and humid, windy and watery: maple leaves stuck on windshields like Post-it notes: dogs trotting by in embarrassing raincoats: half a bowl of Halloween candy playing come-hither on the kitchen counter: wet pavement and old tea leaves perfuming the air.
It feels like a day for spirits, of the Dickensian sort, or the Wrinkle in Time sort--the blowsy kind who buffet the parlor ceiling and trail scarves and shawls, who can't stop jingling their keys and clanking their shoe buckles. Their hair is rat-tails and frowst; their noses are red; they tip over tables and clonk into doorframes. Some are apologetic; some never notice their mayhem. Unromantic ghosts, with baggy trousers and shapeless house dresses and holes in their pockets. They're all over the neighborhood this morning.
Very evocative...and you sent me to the dictionary. lol
ReplyDeleteHope your day is delightful (and I have zero candy--I'm jealous~)
"Frowst," maybe? That's a favorite word of mine, but I rarely get the chance to use it.
ReplyDeleteLove all of this. With or without "frost." :)
ReplyDeleteThat's of course "frowst." Autocorrect, thou bane.
DeleteYes, frowst. I suspect that it's related to frowsy, too? Hey, there's a prompt: you must use one word that has fallen into disuse/obcurity in a poem, and not have it sound pretentious. Dickens would be a treasure chest of possibilities!
ReplyDelete!!! :) Yeah, that guy sure do the police in different voices. ;)
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