Sunday, February 08, 2026
Monochrome
The city is behind me. In daylight, with no lights visible, the wind and the breakers cutting off all sound, one might think it uninhabited, but it isn't, it's just temporarily of no importance. The tall spires on its summit, rigid and precise, seem sketched by a draftsman's pencil with no concern but anything but the laws of geometry. Along the seawall a few sheets of newspaper take wing among scattered indifferent gulls, then fall, dispirited, huddling against unlit streetlamps and refuse cans.
Even where I stand, separated from the water's edge by a plateau of impenetrable rock a hundred yards across, I feel the cold mist against my face. The sun wanders out from cloud cover briefly, illuminating patches of wet stone scattered with fragmentary strands of seaweed, then loses heart and disappears. As the tide crests its bore surges into the mouth of the great river, annihilating its flow in a deafening battle of waters. Its accumulating force is terrible to contemplate.
There are no ships visible in the offing; if any there are, steaming their way miles out, they are hidden by waves and low clouds. The grand beacon, sunk into an exposed shelf of rock just up the coast, blinks metronomically, untended, unseen. I shudder and hoist up my overcoat, then turn my back on the sea and go home.
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