Resting Elbows Nearly Prayer RI Ko 2007 :: SRFL Collection
I humbly beg your pardon.
The hills in June were refreshing. Even though the wind blew up and hit my cheeks, it wasn't cold anymore. Low summer clouds were rising in the sky that opened far to the south. It's the last summer of high school. Tadokoro thought that irreplaceable time would pass. Every time something happened, I came to the hills and hugged something. The hills were such a place. A highway ran under the hills, and a wide forest spread to the west. Although not visible from the top of the hill, the house in Tadokoro was also on the edge. From autumn to winter in his first year of high school, he was trying to summarize his thoughts as he walked through the forest where the leaves had begun to fall. Sometimes I walked with a book in my hand. It is one of the series called "Literature" edited by Takeo Kuwabara of the Iwanami course, borrowed from the library in the neighbouring Midoriin city, and I read the series of Philosophy containing the article by Michitaro Tanaka of the Jimbun-shoin publishers.
There were many things I wanted to do in Tadokoro. Life in high school was fulfilling. When I was in my first year of high school, science was biology and earth science. Weather maps were created once or twice in the earth science class. The teacher recorded the weather conditions on NHK in the classroom, listened to them, wrote them in the weather map record field, and actually wrote the weather map. Tadokoro was interested in weather maps. I was particularly interested in how to write isobars. The subtle bulges and narrowing of the isobars were expressed by paying particular attention to the wind direction from the records of the observation points.
Tadokoro's high school used to be an old junior high school for boys only, and after the war it became coeducational, but there were only 100 girls for 300 boys in the first grade. Therefore, of the eight classes in the first grade, four classes were for men and women, but the remaining four classes were for boys only. Tadokoro became a men's class in the first year, a men's and women's class in the second year, and another men's class in the third year.
Read more:
https://srfl-collection.webnode.com/news/resting-elbows-nearly-prayer-ri-ko-2007/#.YQVZAD-iAn4.wordpress
No comments:
Post a Comment