A fairy morning.
Up at 8:00 To School thru (sic) Wade Park. A heavy dew - looking sunwards the bristling sward is sparkling white - trees misshapen masses of white haze - workmen at a sewer black objects haze blurred - woods in a red purple haze - faint warble mutterings.
To cut - or no? That troubled me at first but finally with a light heart I hastened to my room to secure sketchbook. On way I pause on a lane edging the bluff above Doan creek to see a crow which I had heard in the stream bed. At my approach it flew up, pursued by another. Rapidly weaving in and out among the purple hazed trees, they fade into the distance.
Coming back, I sit down on Goethe & Schiller monument to sketch. The course of the slight breeze is marked by a slanting shower of sparkled whirligig leaves. The air is full of the cricket-like chisel chipping from the new Art Museum; a chickadee’s lisping whistle - a roar of a train; men aimlessly strolling thru (sic) the park - a squirrel with many abrupt tail snapping and statuesque alertness waves along over the leafy ground.
The soft leaves float down like a sparkle of yellow butterflies against a September sky. Nothing has quite so keen a sense of fun as a fallen leaf says Barrie. With what riotous joy they pursue an auto down the lane!
October woods - a sparkling splotch of orange against the blue.
The shadows of falling leaves rushing toward me on the green grass!
At noon Bob & I plan our menu for our walk Sunday. Bob gives me Ingersoll’s “Why I am an agnostic” On reading the opening paragraph’s, I find it tallies with what I have long thought. My sense of freedom comes in upon me more today than for some time. As long as I can remember I always had a hatred of much of formal religion. To go forth into life free of superstition, faith, Christian dogma - to look at nature with an innocent mind - how else can one see its beauty? Thus, life is becoming more sublime each day. The novelty of casting away of my “chains”, tho (sic) it is so long ago I cannot remember when, has not yet worn off. My salvation is that I think neither of God or eternity. The present! The past & the future are alike nothing.
To Austin’s for supper. One way Austin & I have a discussion of Christianity. His life must always be a lie, hypocricy (sic); for he has discarded from his mind the formalistic principals of Christianity yet, lacking sufficient strength of character, must go on professing a belief in it. Or is he “agnostic” only in my company, Christian in the next man’s?
After supper music on Victrola. Three selections from Wagner. He affects me as does no other composer. The effect comes afterwards. It takes me away; I am not normal. Music is to me the most stirring & emotional of all man’s arts. Music could rule my actions - make me lie, cheat, murder, arouse my passion to ungovernable heights - is it weakness to feel so? Or is the composer strong? Yet music inspires none of these, only the thought that it could do so.
Charles E Burchfield, Oct 22, 1914