Hey Jeffrey here and welcome back to Nightfall.
It's your day being. I hope you've had a good one and you're now all cozy and sleepy.
“I've got a quick favor to ask. Please do share the show with friends and family. It helps us”
to grow and hopefully we can soothe them to sleep with some stories from Nightfall. I've just been on the most gorgeous walk without all. The sun was peeping through the trees. The barn was sparkling and bubbling with insects buzzing around and a heron that flew with us. Always two steps ahead.
The beauty of those things aside sometimes on these walks I find glory in the most mundane
things. The sound of a latch on a gate, the squelch of mud under a foot, the dance of pollen in the shafts of sunlight, perfect. Tonight I'm going to share a story that's all about
“shooting into the extraordinary beauty, hiding in ordinary things.”
Before we begin, here's the quick ad break that keeps this free content possible. To go add free, subscribe, via the link in the show notes. You know, there are a lot of different places here in Nightfalls, but during the day I still find myself wanting to learn a little more about the world. That's what led me to everything everywhere daily. It's one of the most popular daily education podcasts. Even recently ranked the number one history podcast, and each episode is about 10 minutes.
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liked and include one in the history of curling, which as a scar I have a soft spot for, tracing it back to medieval Scotland, or their episode on the world's greatest art museums, which I find myself really drawn to, have always loved art, and hearing the stories behind these places makes it feel surprisingly immersive. So if you like the idea of learning something new without ever feeling like work, learn something new every single day with everything
everywhere daily, find out on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Alright, now back to Nightfalls. I was with more considered herself an unremarkable woman, with an unremarkable job, working for the municipal council in the revenue department. She'd been there for seven years documenting parking fines and cataloging business licenses with methodical precision. Not everyone who worked at the revenue department enjoyed their jobs,
but Iris found pleasure in it. She enjoyed that the office door had a brass door knob, which fitted perfectly in her hand, and made the most satisfying heavy clunk when it swung closed. She enjoyed the papers she spent her day filling, made delicate whispering, rustling noises.
“To her, they sounded like they were telling secret. In fact, not as she would ever share this with”
anyone. She sometimes felt that if she just listened hard enough, she would hear what the papers were whispering to her. She enjoyed the way that when the cattle boiled, it steam fogged the office windows, the neat little zip noise the office blind made when they were pulled up, or down. The quarks of her cool workers, one of them collected stamps, but only from friends, and one insisted on writing everything in a fountain pen filled with green ink.
In the feeling of turning the light off and bathing the office in darkness, whenever she was the last to leave. And then one Tuesday morning, rather like her unremarkable job, Iris was having her usual unremarkable start to the day, until she received a very remarkable letter. For one thing, it had not arrived in ordinary post. One minute she'd been admiring the way
The sunlight fell through the jar of marmalade on the breakfast table, and th...
she realized to the start that there was an envelope prompt against the marmalade jar. Remarkable.
“What also made this letter remarkable was the envelope, which was the color of twilight,”
and the writing on it, which was done in flourishes of silver calligraphy. And more remarkable still, the contents of the letter, which informed Iris she was getting a promotion. Not to senior administrative officer at the revenue office, which was a post she'd been quietly hoping for. Not to the department had, which was a post she had been secretly dreaming about.
No, Iris was being transferred to another department altogether. One she'd never heard of.
Here is precisely what the letter said. Dear Ms. Wittmore, you accordingly invited to accept the position of archivists that the registry of small wonders, and the Department of the Emporian of all imaginable things in the city of some knowledge. Your particular skills, in noticing what others overlook, have not gone unnoticed. We have need of someone who can catalogue the small,
“but essential miracles of everyday life.”
So do you choose to accept this position? Please be at your local train station this evening as the first star appears. Wait on platform 7, the midnight blue train will arrive. It will take you where you need to go. Yours in wonder, the keeper of intangible collections. Iris read the letter three times. Then she checked the date on her calendar to make sure it was not
April Fool's Day. It was not. Iris Wittmore had always been perfectly content with her life
and her job, and all the small pleasures both of these afforded her every day.
“She had no wish to change her life in any way, and yet this letter awoke a sense of marvelous curiosity”
in her. And so, although it was entirely out of character, Iris came to a decision with her self. She would travel to the city of some knowledge and take up this mysterious new post at the registry of small wonders. She spent the day at work in a state of distracted revery, listening to the whisper of the documents she filed, and the satisfying clunk of the closing door. When five o'clock came, feeling like she was in a dream, she put on her coat,
wound her scar for round her neck, and walked towards the train station. She was surprised to find platform seven existed at all. She'd been catching trains from this station for years, and had only ever noticed platforms one through sex. She was surprised to had how peaceful this platform was. In the early evening, the station was busy with commuters, but she was the lone passenger on the
seventh platform. Iris savered the unexpected moment to solidude, while she waited for the first
star to rise in the sky. The twilight above her head deepened. The first star of the evening appeared, winking at her, companionably. And then, from somewhere far away, she heard it. A train whistle, his sounded like an invitation. The train that pulled into the station was midnight blue, just as the letter had promised. It's brass fittings gleamed. It's windows glued with warm, golden light. The doors opened with a soft sigh, and Iris stepped aboard.
Inside she met a conductor in a blue velvet coat, the fastened with star-shaped buttons.
He showed her down a softly carpeted corridor to a private compartment.
A bad dressed and crisp white linens occupied one wall, piled with pillows.
“Heavy blue curtains in midnight blue were drawn across the window.”
Everything smelled faintly of lavender, and something else she could not quite name. She sniffed deeply. It was the smell of possibility perhaps, or adventure. The train pulled away, rocking gently down the tracks. Iris' eyelids felt suddenly heavy. She climbed into bed, and before she knew it. She was asleep. When Iris woke, pale morning light was filtering through the curtains. A steaming cup of
“herbal tea was on the table next to her bed. Iris sipped it slowly,”
enjoying the way the delicate blend of herbs danced over her tongue. Then, placing the teacup with a satisfying chink back into its saucer, she drew the curtains. She gasped. Outside the window, the world had transformed. The train was descending into a valley surrounded by tall blue mountains. Their peaks were white with snow. Frozen river wounds through the valley like a silver ribbon. And there, nestled between the snowy mountains and the frosty
“river was a very remarkable looking city. All tall or neat buildings, fantastical statues,”
glass domes, and turrets. So this was some knowledge. The train pulled into a station that looked too iris, like a palace. She buttoned herself into her coat and stepped onto the platform. Her breath misting in the cool air. The station was busy with travelers, families with children, couples walking arm and arm, musicians carrying instrument cases, artists with portfolios under their arms. Iris followed the flow of people out of the station
and into the streets of some knowledge. The morning air was crisp. Snow crunched, softly beneath her feet. She walked past coffeehouses with steamed up windows, bakeries, displaying cakes like jeweled sculptures, past bookshops, and toy shops. Past shops selling things she could not quite identify. Past a wonderfully elegant department store with a sign that read,
the Emporium of all imaginable things. Curiously, for she had never visited some knowledge
before, she had a sense that she knew exactly where she was going. Which was why she found herself climbing a small hill and stopping at the building perched on its top. A silver sign on the building's door read, registry of small wonders, staff entrance. She pushed open the door and found herself in a quiet corridor. Her footsteps echoed softly, she walked its length. In lead to a spiral staircase with a polished wooden banister, Iris noticed and appreciated
how the banister was smooth, almost silky beneath her palm. The staircase led up, up, to a door the very same shade of twilight blue as the envelope she had received the day before.
Iris drew a deep graph, raised her hand, and not. The time was his first knock, the door swung open,
as if by magic. She found herself in a room that seemed to exist outside of ordinary
Spatial logic.
Tall windows led in streams of pale morning light. The walls were lined with mahogany cabinet.
Each cabinet contained hundreds upon hundreds of small drawers, labeled in meticulous, copper plate handwriting. In the center of the room stood a desk. On the desk in that familiar twilight shade of blue, lay a note addressed to her. "Dear Ms. Widmore, welcome to the small wonders department. Your predecessor retired after 40 years of devoted service and we are delighted
“to have you continued this essential work. Your task is simple and infinite. To catalog the small”
miracles that occur in the course of ordinary life, you will find your current assignment in the
top drawer of this desk. I resopened the top drawer. Inside was a single card, one which was written, assignment, catalogs, small wonders pertaining to the color blue. She sat down at the desk. She opened a ledger that lay ready. Its pages creamy and blank. She uncapped a fountain pen that had been thoughtfully provided. Then she paused. What exactly constituted a small wonder related to the color blue? For several minutes, she sat in silence, watching dust modes
drift through the morning light. And then gradually, blue began to arrive in her mind.
She began to ride. The particular shade of blue velvet lining my grandmother's jewelry box, which I was allowed to touch on special occasions. Once she had written this, another blue arrived in her mind. The blue of a Robin's egg discovered intact on the grain. And another. The blue of my father's work sharts, sun faded and smiling of laundry soap.
“She wrote all the small miraculous blues she could remember.”
But then she couldn't think of anymore. She stretched back in her chair, tapped her pen against her chin, and looked around the room. Weeding to see if another blue would come to her. It did, after a fashion. A sun being pierced through one of the room's tall windows, and shone a spotlight on a single drawer. Iris went to the drawer and opened it. From inside, she drew to fragment of summer sky from a July afternoon in 1987.
She added it to the registry. Then another drawer caught the corner of her eye.
“This held a sample of the blue that flickers at the center of a gas flame.”
She continued in this way for the rest of the afternoon, going to drawers that held the royal blue of leather and cyclopedia covers. The blue grey of the ocean. Iris had to be careful not to splash that one all over the floor, and the blue of summer twilight. The next day Iris returned. There were still many blues to be catalogued.
The blue of old photographs fading with time. The blue of swimming pool water and summer. The blue note in jazz. That particular musical pitch that conveyed ache and sweetness. The blue tingeed smell of snow about to fall. And she worked. She noticed slowly that she was not alone in the room. There were in the vast space of the registry office, other mahogany desks.
Other workers busy filling their registry books, walking from drawer to drawer.
Over the next few days, she met her fellow archivists.
“Marquez was archiving small wonders pertaining to windows.”
The ice blossoms that appeared across their pains in winter. The joy conveyed by a small child's nose print against a foggy glass. And Yolanda, archived small wonders pertaining to autumn. So far, she had catalogued 17 different varieties of leaf rustle. Winter deepened in some knowledge. And Iris found yet more blues to catalog.
She archived the blue of icicles hanging from eaves. Each one containing traps light.
“The blue shadows cast by snow and moonlight. The blue gray of the sky before a snowstorm.”
One morning, when the snow was thawing, and the first pale green leaves of spring,
or starting to appear on the trees, I was walked into the registry and saw another twilight blue envelope on her desk. She opened it. An ID badge dropped out. Underneath her photograph was written, Iris would more, registry of small wonders, field agent. Iris understood, it was time for her to go out into the world, and find more small wonders to add to the archive.
She started in some knowledge itself. She collected samples from the blue for a get me knot,
the group between the cracks and the cobblestones, and from the first delicate blue bells
that appeared in the fields around the city, on the first day of milky spring sunshine. She collected the blue letters in sharp signs. The blue of glass buildings reflected in puddles. The blue shadows cast by street lamps. The blue of a stranger's scarf, bright like a flag on a grey day. She went farther afield. She collected textures of blue. The smoothness of blue sea glass. The roughness of blue will. The coolness of blue tiles.
She collected tastes of blue. The blue freshness of peppermint. The tang of blueberries, sharp on the tongue. She went farther afield. She collected samples from the sulfurous blue waters of the blue lagoon in Iceland, and from the Greek island of Santorini, where all the eggshell white buildings are topped with cobalt blue roofs. She traveled deep into the rainforest of New Guinea to find a powerbird's nest. The powerbird, like Iris, is a collector of blue,
and builds its home from blue materials. Old scraps of blue ribbon, blue bottle caps, fragments of blue tarpaulin, blue shalls, blue feathers, blue berries, blue stone. She looked at the powerbird, fussing over its blue arrangement with a kind of contented recognition. Iris returned to some knowledge. The city was even more beautiful than she remembered, and even more filled with blue. She noticed the blue smoke, curling from chimneys in the early
morning. The blue painted shutters on the windows of apartment. The blue awnings over sharp front.
“The blue neon signs that flickered to life is evening fell. The blue glaze on the pottery sold”
in the market square. The blue black of the sky just before the night fell. After the excitement of being in the field, the slow methodical work of placing each one of her wondrous samples in the drawers of the registry office fell like a welcome pause.
Iris savored the slow pace of her days.
registry. From her mid-morning cup of tea, to her whispered afternoon chats with her colleagues,
“to her habit of bidding the shelves a soft good night when she left work for the day.”
At the start of her time at the registry, Iris wasn't sure if she'd be able to carry out her assignment. She couldn't imagine adding more than a dozen blue wonders to the registry.
And indeed, on her first morning at work, she thought she had listed all the blues she knew.
Now, she felt this work of noticing, observing and celebrating could go on forever. But soon enough, when she came into the office one morning, there was an envelope lying on Iris's
“desk. It was not the usual twilight blue color. It was white in certain lights, apparently grey”
and others. She opened it, and ran. "Dear Ms. Whitmore, we congratulate you on the savor and careful work you have done cataloging small wonders for taining to the colour blue. We are entirely satisfied. Your next project is to catalog small wonders pertaining to things that are forgotten." Iris knew she shouldn't feel sad. After all, the registry was pleased with her work. She ought to feel happy. And yet, there were so many wondrous blue
“things that remained to be cataloged. She wasn't finished. She was nowhere near finished.”
The paper was folded in half. She unfolded it to read the rest of the note. It said, "Don't feel sad, Ms. Whitmore, that you haven't finished the catalog of small wonders pertaining to the colour blue. A full and complete archive of small wonders
can never exist. Small wonders are infinite and ever occurring. The work then is not in the finishing.
It lies in the noticing, the savoring, the appreciating and the remembering. Iris smiled to herself. She sat down at her desk and opened the new notebook which had appeared there. The pages were blank and when she ran her hand over them, they felt sad and smooth. All of a sudden her mind was filled with thoughts of forgotten small wonders. The crisp paper money left in a coat pocket all summer and discovered with the light
when the weather turned cold again. The joy of a forgotten word, or fact, suddenly appearing on the tip of your tongue. The hazy half forgotten contentment of a lovely dream that fades on waking. Flyers and sniped out articles, pressed into books, and forgotten year after year,
until they are finally taken down from the shell. She took up her pen and began to write.
We'll leave our story there for tonight. I love sharing that with you. And with you, sweet dream. [Music]
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