The Describer's Dictionary: A Treasury of Terms & Literary Quotations (15 page)

BOOK: The Describer's Dictionary: A Treasury of Terms & Literary Quotations
11.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
 
 
The earth grows wan and weird, defertilized, dehumanized, neither brown nor gray nor beige nor taupe nor ecru, the no color of death reflecting light, sponging up light with its hard, parched shag and shooting it back at us....
HENRY MILLER,
The Colossus of Maroussi
 
 
Walls of daffodil yellow are broken by vermillion pylons, purple buttresses appear against rosy domes, and vistas of turquoise blue terminate in great ships’ bows of ultramarine. GUIDEBOOK TO THE NEW YORK WORLD’S FAIR, 1939/1940 (AS QUOTED IN HELEN A. HARRISON,
Dawn of a New Day)
 
 
At Stenness, only three of an original twelve or thirteen stones survive; but the ruins remain impressive, as much because of the peculiar characteristics of the flagstone as because of the massive size of the slabs. All are more than fifteen feet tall, quite broad, but remarkably slender, one waif-like sheet being less than a foot in thickness. The Brod- gar stones are of the same flagstone; changing colour according to the light, they sometimes seem a pinkish buff, but the hues are spangled with white and lemon lichen blotches, and sometimes a furry, blue-green lichen growth.
RICHARD MUIR,
The Stones of Britain
 
 
Eventually I identified the rocks. The petrified roses were barite, probably from Oklahoma. The scratchy brown mineral was bauxite—aluminum ore. The black glass was obsidian; the booklet of transparent sheets was mica; the goldeny iridescent handful of soft crystals was chalcopyrite, an ore of copper....
ANNIE DILLARD,
An American Childhood
 
not transparent
untransparent, nontransparent, opaque, adiaphanous,
impervious
admitting the passage of (or letting show through) light
translucent, diaphanous, pellucid, sheer
transparent in water or when wet
hydrophanous
 
without color
colorless, hueless, achromatic, achromic, untinged
colored
colorful, hued, toned, painted, chromatic, pigmented,
tinctured (dyed or stained)
slightly or weakly colored
tinged, tinted, tinctured
having one color or hue
monochrome, monochromatic, monochromous,
monochromic, monotone
having many colors
many-colored, multicolored, parti-colored, variegated,
motley, varicolored, versicolor, versicolored, polychromatic,
polychrome, polychromic kaleidoscopic, prismatic
rainbow-like
iridescent, iridian
changeable in or showing a shift or play of color
iridescent
highly or brilliantly colored
prismatic
having altered or poor coloration
discolored
 
 
The scattered polychrome of the exterior, strewn with blobs and drops as if handfuls of coloured confetti have been thrown at it, evokes the atmosphere of a Venetian carnival with gondolas and crinolines.
LARA VINCA MASINI,
audi
 
 
The smaller man was looking around, with the air of a child just come to a birthday party—at the clumsy old island schooners tied up at the water’s edge, with red sails furled; at the native women in bright dresses and the black ragged crewmen, bargaining loudly over bananas, coconuts, strange huge brown roots, bags of charcoal, and strings of rainbow-colored fish; at the great square red fort, and at the antique cannons atop its slanted seaward wall, pointing impotently to sea; at the fenced statue of Amerigo Vespucci, almost hidden in purple, orange, and pink bougainvillea; at the houses of Queen’s Row, their ancient arching plaster facades painted in vivid colors sun-bleached to pastels; at the old gray stone church, and the white-washed Georgian brick pile of the Sir Francis Drake Inn.
HERMAN WOUK,
Don’t Stop the Carnival
 
 
New elements (especially prevalent in the highlands) include the first attempts at polychrome painting (black, white, red, and yellow paints applied after firing), the first bichrome slipping (for instance, red-on-cream and red-on-orange), and the beginnings of the Usulutan tradition of resist decoration. Red, black, orange, and streaky brown slipped wares are typical; the streaky-brown pieces were often highly polished.
SYLVANUS MORLEY,
The Ancient Maya
Useful Color Modifiers
 
 
 
COLORS
 
 
snow white
snowy, niveous
white as chalk
chalk white, cretaceous, chalky
white as milk
milky white
white as a lily
lily white
bleached-out white
blanched, etiolated
 
 
But above all it is the fantastic colouring of the beaches that as an image overpowers the minutiae. Above the tide-line the grey rocks are splashed gorse-yellow with close-growing lichen, and with others of blue-green and salmon pink. Beneath them are the vivid orange-browns and siennas of wrack-weeds, the violet of mussel-beds, dead-white sand, and water through which one sees down to the bottom, as through pale green bottle-glass, to where starfish and big spiny urchins of pink and purple rest upon the broad leaves of the sea-tangle.
GAVIN MAXWELL,
Ring of Bright Water
 
 
The picture was her final treasure waiting to be packed for the journey. In whatever room she had called her own since childhood, there it had also lived and looked at her, not quite familiar, not quite smiling, but in its prim colonial hues delicate as some pressed flower. Its pale oval, of color blue and rose and flaxen, in a battered, pretty gold frame, uncon querably pervaded any surroundings with a something like last year’s lavender.
OWEN WISTER,
The Virginian
 
 
From the basic blackness of the flesh of the tribe there broke or erupted a wave of red color, and the people all arose on the white stone of the grandstands and waved red objects, waved or flaunted. Crimson was the holy-day color of the Wariri. The amazons saluted with purple banners, the king’s colors. His purple umbrella was raised, and its taut head swayed. SAUL BELLOW,
Henderson the Rain King
not quite pure white or slightly grayish
off-white (e.g., oyster, cream, eggshell)
thinly or translucently white
bone white
bluish white
alabaster
yellowish white
eggshell, cream, ivory, bone
grayish white
oyster, platinum, tattletale gray
silvery white
argent
bluish white
pearl
 
bright or vivid red
crimson, scarlet, vermilion, vermeil, cardinal, carmine,
geranium, cinnabar, apple red, tomato, lobster red,
fire-engine red, fiery
dark red
wine, wine red, maroon, ruby, cranberry, garnet, currant
moderate red
cherry, cerise, blood red
brownish red
burgundy
orangish red
poppy
grayish or bluish red
strawberry
purplish red
raspberry, magenta, grape, raisin, claret
brick red
lateritious
rust red
rufous, ferruginous
 
 
Thundery day along Greenback. All the willows standing still with their leaves pricked. Dusty green. Pale lilac shadows. Tarred road reflecting the sky. Blue to make you jump. A great cloud over on the Surrey shore. Yellow as soap and solid as a cushion. Shaped like a tower about a mile high and half a mile thick, with a little Scotch pepper pot in front. Dresden blue behind full of sunlight floating like gold dust. River roughed up with little waves like the flat side of a cheese grater. Dark copper under the cloud, dark lead under the blue. I could use that cloud in the Fall, I thought. It’s a solid square. To give weight in the top left-hand corner, opposite the Tower. Salmon on pink. It’s an idea worth trying.
JOYCE CARY,
The Horse’s Mouth
 
 
The mountains were covered with a rug of trees, green, yellow, scarlet and orange, but their bare tops were scarfed and beribboned with snow. From carved rocky outcrops, waterfalls drifted like skeins of white lawn, and in the fields we could see the amber glint of rivers and the occasional mirror-like flash of a mountain lake....
GERALD AND LEE DURRELL,
Durrell in Russia
 
 
Above the field the swollen palpitating tangle of light frayed and thinned out into hot darkness, but the thirty thousand pairs of eyes hanging on the inner slopes of the arena did not look up into the dark but stared down into the pit of light, where men in red silky-glittering shorts and gold helmets hurled themselves gainst men in blue silky glittering shorts and gold helmets and spilled and tumbled on the bright arsenical-green turf like spilled dolls, and a whistle sliced chill- ingly through the thick air like that scimitar through a sofa cushion.
ROBERT PENN WARREN,
All the King’s Men
 
pink
rose, salmon, carnation
yellowish pink
seashell, coral, flesh-colored, peach
whitish-to-yellowish pink
shell
deep pink
melon
vivid or glowing pink
hot pink, shocking pink
 
reddish orange
tangerine, carrot
brownish orange
terra-cotta, Titian, tawny
 
bright or vivid yellow
goldenrod, daffodil
light yellow
canary
pale yellow
straw yellow, flaxen, primrose, ocher
orange yellow
champagne
moderate yellow
brass
greenish yellow
citron, lemon, mustard, lime
grayish yellow
buckskin, oatmeal, parchment, honey yellow, chamois
brownish yellow
amber, buff, gold
pinkish yellow
apricot, peach
 
 
I haven’t (the seeing eye), unfortunately, so that the world is full of places to which I want to return—towns with the blinding white sun upon them; stone pines against the blue of the sky; corners of gables, all carved and painted with stags and scarlet flowers and crowstepped gables with the little saint at the top; and grey and pink palazzi and walled towns a mile or so back from the sea, on the Mediterranean, between Leghorn and Naples.
FORD MADOX FORD,
The Good Soldier
 
 
A triangle of white light was advancing from the porch into the sitting room, over the curling edge of the electric-blue carpet, which lay untacked on the terrazzo floor.
V. S. NAIPAUL.
Guerrillas
 
 
The wind howled, piling up snow in drifts and blinding the night with ice-white dust. I walked bent over against the cold, protecting my eyes with my arms. Trees, posts, cowsheds loomed into my vision, then vanished, swallowed in white.
JOHN GARDNER,
Grendel
 
bright or vivid green
emerald, smaragdine

Other books

El deseo by Hermann Sudermann
McFarlane's Perfect Bride by Christine Rimmer
Finale by Becca Fitzpatrick
Aurorarama by Jean-Christophe Valtat
Stages of Grace by Carey Heywood
Honored Enemy by Raymond E. Feist
The Art of Intimacy by Stacey D'Erasmo