OPINION

The Country Side of Life

Written by Robert Brady
Published July 08, 2005
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And fireflies, of a summer night! Or a rainy summer night, when the underneaths of leaves are lit by thousands of tiny lanterns as the firefly party goes on despite the downpour. Rain, too, in the country is different from rain in the city, where it is a wet bothersome thing serving no natural function (except maybe to water the park), only an artificial one when in the summer it sometimes brings desperately needed relief to what city officials, and I guess everybody by now, calls heat island syndrome, which is when the sun and the city work together to form a kind of sidewalk inferno. And I probably don't need to point out the difference between a city summer night and a country summer night, nor dwell at length on the differences between the other seasons as experienced in these respective locales, but I will.

In the country summer the nights are cool, there is tree breath everywhere, and you can breathe its perfume beneath a sky broadcast with all the diamonds of the universe for you,. And you sleep better too, since you're so much more at home, because we all came from the country. And when autumn arrives, who can describe what is more beautiful than all the masterpieces of all the museums in the world put together? This is the very beauty painters chase to the grave. And this isn't just oils on canvas on walls in museums next to the park; this is the real thing — you can go out and walk right in it for hours, and there's no admission fee.

And then comes the country winter, with its majestic, sweeping calligraphies of snow just sitting there on silent show, gleaming with sunlight for days and weeks in tree- and stubble- and furrow- and grove-shaped whiteness-impeccable sculptures, and the blue-blue air is so big that the snow show is but a small part of it all, and not in the way, as it is in the city where pretty soon after snow falls and makes headlines it gets slushy and ugly or dangerously icy; country snow, soft and plush, is by contrast a big down comforter mother nature always throws over the countryside about this time, and whereas in the city the snow merely treacherizes pedestrians and vehicularians, and taxes the sewage system with often excessive volumes of what is called "runoff," in the country snow has actual natural functions, among others of insulating the soil from the chill of late winter and watering it in spring the way spring is in the country, for in the country spring is exactly where it belongs, its green songs up out of the ground swelling in time into chorales of wildflowers and all kinds of random demonstrations of the beauty nature can build if left on its own, the way it is out in the country.

Edited: bhw

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The Country Side of Life
Published: July 08, 2005
Type: Opinion
Section: Tastes
Filed Under: Books: Arts, Books: Families, Books: Health, Books: Home and Garden, Books: Nonfiction, Books: Outdoors, Books: Spirituality, Books: Travel, Culture: Family and Relationships, Tastes: Food and Drink, Politics: U.S., Culture: Society, Music: Folk
Writer: Robert Brady
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Comments

#1 — July 8, 2005 @ 09:21AM — Sister Ray

There are trade-offs. Cities have employment, cultural and educational opportunites (and even "real birds"). I like living someplace with libraries that are open on Sunday, museums, cinemas, music and film festivals, religious diversity, etc. That was my choice. Doesn't mean I hate sunsets.
Plus, if everybody moved to the country it would turn into cookie-cutter suburbia any wouldn't be country anymore.

#2 — July 8, 2005 @ 09:35AM — Nancy

Yah - that's what's happened in my neck of the woods: the entire area for hundreds of miles around DC is turning into one gigantic bedroom community of McMansions, punctuated by strip malls, business 'parks', and the occasional 10 sq. acres of parkland that exists only because it's been designated as a historical site. And as it is, the damned developers probably tried to pave it over to make a car dealership.

#3 — July 8, 2005 @ 10:19AM — Bennett

Beautiful piece Robert. I too live "way out" in the country. I don't encorage folks to move away from the cities, it isn't for everyone. But if you dreamed of chickens and cows and lush gardens as a child, don't wait!

The joys of watching your very own forest grow tall over ten or twenty years, as you thin out the overcrowded second growth to transform your proprty into a private Golden Gate Park...

Hard to beat! Thanks for this post!

#4 — October 9, 2006 @ 08:25AM — Terry Walsh. [URL]

I live in a town in the North of England but need a regular fix of country. I only need to drive about 25 miles to be in stunning countryside and I head for the hills every week searching out little used country roads and shady lanes, just me and my camera, magic.

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