The first snow, following a fine sunrise.
I realize for the first today, what my phonograph is going to mean to me. Playing a number of the songs of [Mussorgsky] I felt as tho he, [Mussorgsky] were in my studio, as tho I were communing with him. This feeling I think could only come from my being entirely alone with the music.
A wierd (sic) effect at noon. Darkness settled down over the earth – the sky was a think yellowish gray, a peculiar ominous color – light from the studio streamed out over the snow as at night, a last twilight – a flash or two of lightning, followed by deep hollow thunder – snow falling steadily.
(would this be like the first – or last rather – brief day at the Artic circle?)
I saw in my mind’s eye, the whole panorama of Fall, from the lurid October trees, thru the idyllic November sunlit days, to sudden winter.
Charles E. Burchfield, November 15, 1938