Writers have a most extraordinary need to know. We're like small children when it comes to knowledge, always asking "Why?" and if that is so, "Why?" and "Why?" again, until an adult in the room says "Because!"
We are the adult in the room by the time we begin our careers and finding the answers to our "Whys?" is our job,
So, at times in my career, I have asked and found the answers to the wonderings below.
Wondering about ... colors/colours:
Why is the sky blue?
What is a rainbow?
Why is the nighttime sky black?
Why are the clouds white?
Why do we say "Red sky at night, sailors delight?" and "Red sky at morning, sailors take warning?"
Why is a coward called 'yellow'?
Why is a novice called 'green'?
Why is some prose called 'purple'?
For that matter, why is purple associated with royalty?
And the one question I haven't found an answer to but suspect I can guess "Why do some people hate 'orange'?
Answers in the Comments, please!
Thursday, July 26, 2018
Wondering
Labels:
colors,
conventions,
Leigh Verrill-Rhys,
mythology,
physics,
science,
superstitions,
taste
Leigh is the author of Wait a Lonely Lifetime, Salsa Dancing with Pterodactyls, the serial novel by installment, Nights Before and Pavane for Miss Marcher, both set in her native Maine. Leigh also writes Welsh Medieval Romance under the pen name, Lily Dewaruile.
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Hi Leigh--
ReplyDeleteYou are so right. Curiosity is a must for creative types, even writers. For me my projects always start with a question. And I think there are questions we answer with every book we write.
Victoria--
Thank you, Victoria!
DeleteWithout curiosity there isn't much to write about!
I always appreciate your comments.