At the start of Annie Dillard’s interpretation of a solar eclipse, she describes the sky as being of a deep indigo that has never been seen on the Earth. Dillard was enthralled with the alpenglow on top of the snowy mountains. In astonishment, she continues to describe her experience of observation of the moon pursuing to entirely obscure the sun. We can evaluate her experience to be full of details and her evaluation to be full of sensations. Dillard’s evaluation turns from amazement to confusion as the totality continues. She explains the details of her surroundings and her impressions of imagery are powerfully conveyed. She writes “The grasses were wrong.Their every detail of stem, head, and blade shone lightless and artificially distant