Snow and more snow
Feb. 8th, 2007 07:46 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
So, I was woken up this morning by a woman's voice yelling, "Oh my God!"
My immediate befuddled thought: there's a fire. There's a mistake and he isn't dead. Followed by of course there isn't a fire, of course he's still dead, of course it's nine o'clock in the morning I am going back to sleep.
Five minutes later Claire and Pat burst in yelling, "Snow, snow, snow!"
Outside my window there is a small bare tree, and although it's dripping now, then it had three inches of perfectly sculpted snow on each bough and twig. It's soft and white and utterly, viscerally magical out there. Oxford has become a city of snowmen. I think it's the gorgeous combination of a city centre full of students avoiding work, and six inches of beautifully lovely packable fabulous snow snow snow. It's snowed before. It's even snowed in Oxford before. But I swear I haven't been anywhere where there was enough snow to build a snowman since I was six years old.
My favourite of the day is certainly the one by the Radcliffe Camera, who is standing coyly on the grass next to the "Do Not Walk On The Grass sign"; other than him, there's one just round the corner on Jowett, with berries for eyes; there's a massive unformed one on the Master's Field that
narahttbbs has already noted; there's one in the grounds of the Sheldonian, wearing a Jesus scarf and a welcoming expression; there's one in Balliol's garden quad; there's one just visible through Exeter lodge; there's one visible across the field in the University Parks; there are three on the steps of the Martyrs' Memorial with a sign saying "Endangered species"; there's even one by the Said Business School holding a coffee mug in one hand and the Financial Times in the other.
The Sheldonian philosopher heads have been given neat white beards, and the etching on the roofs of Herford has been finely outlined in white. It is utterly beautiful.
Claire and I decided we were going to do two hours of essay-writing before Pat and Liya came back from lectures, but we got through an hour before the siren-song of virgin snow became too much to cope with, and trudged up Holywell executing the now almost second-nature snow-waddle over the treacherous ice, and finally making it to Balliol where the atmosphere has noticeably lightened. Which is to say, about fifty people are on the back quad throwing snowballs at each other.
Oh, it's lovely out there. Eventually, and with the help of
absinthe_shadow, we got to the Master's Field, gazed in awe at the huge expanse of snow that was all ours, and started to build the world's best snow-woman. She had a huge base, an even huger middle - which George insisting on putting breasts on, and a third ball of snow for the head and my polka-dot girl!Doctor hat on the top. She had half-tomatoes for buttons, a carrot for a noise, upturned tealights for eyes and twigs for smile and arms. She was seven-foot-tall monster of a snow-woman.
In fact, I nabbed hundreds of Pat's pictures, so here goes.
Firstly, the tree outside my window early this morning. Ain't it lovely?

The view from Jowett, also very early. That's New College in all its loveliness.

Hertford and the Bridge of Sighs.

The Rad Cam. (Interestingly, a picture very like this was Wikipedia's Featured Picture a few days ago. No snow, though.)

Ahahaha. This picture, for me, represents life in Oxford:

Christ Church Meadow.

Shockingly enough, some people were braving their bikes today. I couldn't do it - the ice was slick and treacherous all the way across Broad Street - but some people are indomitable. That said, I wasn't the only one to note that this was the first day I've lived in Oxford when I haven't been nearly hit by by a bike.

Pat's snow angel, undoubtedly the best one:

Building Carrie Snow, snow-woman of amazingness. (The name comes from, you guessed it, Carousel. I asked at one point while we were building her, "Wasn't there a song in it which had something to do with snow...?"
And was amused at the response, a measured rising chorus of "When I marry Mr. Snow..."

There was consensus on the name.
And here she is, with all of us so you can appreciate the sheer size. I do like this picture. I was adamant that we were going to be strong feminist women and build a snowperson in our own image rather than that of an outdated patriarchal archetype, but then we let George help...

..and he gave her really, really big breasts.

After a bit we got to supplementing Carrie Snow with snow-dogs and snow-goldfish and snow-children. Thus, Enoch Snow Junior and Enoch Snow Junior:

(Yes, it really is that creepy. Urrrgh.)

And, finally, our very own Gap advertisement:

Seriously, don't we look fresh-faced and happy? Even if not a Gap advert, as I said at the time, we look like some sort of campaign for extolling the joy of Oxford life. I do love this picture.
And finally finally, my flatmates are love:


All in all, it was a beautiful day. The city in this white-frosted glory never really got old, just as Oxford's beauty in general never gets old; I'm still, still, even after this term, wandering around in blank amazement that I get to study here, I get to live here, I get to see all this every day, I get to have my home here. And Trinity will be better than this term has been. I know it will. Winter won't last forever.
Having left my flatmates to the various joys of work and sandwiches, and
absinthe_shadow to that of a meeting with the Warden of New, I had a coffee and a nice chat with
slasheuse. Who saw the beautiful untouched snow on Jowett and naturally pelted me with it, and of course I fell ungracefully on my arse for the fourth time today and lay happily on my back in the middle of the road, looking up at the sky. Bliss.
And since then, I have written my day's essay, 1700 words on secondary qualities according to Locke and Berkeley, so I'm a good person really. Tonight no one feels like cooking, so Liya got in some frozen pizzas and in a bit I'm snow-staggering out to Sainsbury's for supplemental vegetables and dessert.
I'm okay and things are better. Snow makes a difference, surprisingly enough. Planning my essay, I was talking to Claire this morning and complaining that the amount of notes spread about my desk seems too little for three days' work, and she looked thoughtful and said she'd thought the same thing about hers. After a second I realised - we've been working, all of us, trying to work, since Monday, but have spent a lot of time staring into space, as well. This is the time lost just thinking: Andy's dead. There's snow and he isn't here to see it. You know? The thoughts that go round your head never go anywhere, but they go round and round regardless. That said, I think shockwaves make for a good metaphor - the shock has been reverberating over and under and around since Monday, but each time they pass through, they're weaker.
Just as night was falling, this was the last sight we had of the the Master's Field from our kitchen window:

My immediate befuddled thought: there's a fire. There's a mistake and he isn't dead. Followed by of course there isn't a fire, of course he's still dead, of course it's nine o'clock in the morning I am going back to sleep.
Five minutes later Claire and Pat burst in yelling, "Snow, snow, snow!"
Outside my window there is a small bare tree, and although it's dripping now, then it had three inches of perfectly sculpted snow on each bough and twig. It's soft and white and utterly, viscerally magical out there. Oxford has become a city of snowmen. I think it's the gorgeous combination of a city centre full of students avoiding work, and six inches of beautifully lovely packable fabulous snow snow snow. It's snowed before. It's even snowed in Oxford before. But I swear I haven't been anywhere where there was enough snow to build a snowman since I was six years old.
My favourite of the day is certainly the one by the Radcliffe Camera, who is standing coyly on the grass next to the "Do Not Walk On The Grass sign"; other than him, there's one just round the corner on Jowett, with berries for eyes; there's a massive unformed one on the Master's Field that
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
The Sheldonian philosopher heads have been given neat white beards, and the etching on the roofs of Herford has been finely outlined in white. It is utterly beautiful.
Claire and I decided we were going to do two hours of essay-writing before Pat and Liya came back from lectures, but we got through an hour before the siren-song of virgin snow became too much to cope with, and trudged up Holywell executing the now almost second-nature snow-waddle over the treacherous ice, and finally making it to Balliol where the atmosphere has noticeably lightened. Which is to say, about fifty people are on the back quad throwing snowballs at each other.
Oh, it's lovely out there. Eventually, and with the help of
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
In fact, I nabbed hundreds of Pat's pictures, so here goes.
Firstly, the tree outside my window early this morning. Ain't it lovely?

The view from Jowett, also very early. That's New College in all its loveliness.

Hertford and the Bridge of Sighs.

The Rad Cam. (Interestingly, a picture very like this was Wikipedia's Featured Picture a few days ago. No snow, though.)

Ahahaha. This picture, for me, represents life in Oxford:

Christ Church Meadow.

Shockingly enough, some people were braving their bikes today. I couldn't do it - the ice was slick and treacherous all the way across Broad Street - but some people are indomitable. That said, I wasn't the only one to note that this was the first day I've lived in Oxford when I haven't been nearly hit by by a bike.

Pat's snow angel, undoubtedly the best one:

Building Carrie Snow, snow-woman of amazingness. (The name comes from, you guessed it, Carousel. I asked at one point while we were building her, "Wasn't there a song in it which had something to do with snow...?"
And was amused at the response, a measured rising chorus of "When I marry Mr. Snow..."

There was consensus on the name.
And here she is, with all of us so you can appreciate the sheer size. I do like this picture. I was adamant that we were going to be strong feminist women and build a snowperson in our own image rather than that of an outdated patriarchal archetype, but then we let George help...

..and he gave her really, really big breasts.

After a bit we got to supplementing Carrie Snow with snow-dogs and snow-goldfish and snow-children. Thus, Enoch Snow Junior and Enoch Snow Junior:

(Yes, it really is that creepy. Urrrgh.)

And, finally, our very own Gap advertisement:

Seriously, don't we look fresh-faced and happy? Even if not a Gap advert, as I said at the time, we look like some sort of campaign for extolling the joy of Oxford life. I do love this picture.
And finally finally, my flatmates are love:


All in all, it was a beautiful day. The city in this white-frosted glory never really got old, just as Oxford's beauty in general never gets old; I'm still, still, even after this term, wandering around in blank amazement that I get to study here, I get to live here, I get to see all this every day, I get to have my home here. And Trinity will be better than this term has been. I know it will. Winter won't last forever.
Having left my flatmates to the various joys of work and sandwiches, and
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
And since then, I have written my day's essay, 1700 words on secondary qualities according to Locke and Berkeley, so I'm a good person really. Tonight no one feels like cooking, so Liya got in some frozen pizzas and in a bit I'm snow-staggering out to Sainsbury's for supplemental vegetables and dessert.
I'm okay and things are better. Snow makes a difference, surprisingly enough. Planning my essay, I was talking to Claire this morning and complaining that the amount of notes spread about my desk seems too little for three days' work, and she looked thoughtful and said she'd thought the same thing about hers. After a second I realised - we've been working, all of us, trying to work, since Monday, but have spent a lot of time staring into space, as well. This is the time lost just thinking: Andy's dead. There's snow and he isn't here to see it. You know? The thoughts that go round your head never go anywhere, but they go round and round regardless. That said, I think shockwaves make for a good metaphor - the shock has been reverberating over and under and around since Monday, but each time they pass through, they're weaker.
Just as night was falling, this was the last sight we had of the the Master's Field from our kitchen window:
