Part 3/18:
The speaker expresses a desire for cooler weather, lamenting the prolonged valley heat and how it saps the vitality and cleanliness of urban life. They contrast today's cooler evenings with the unrelenting heat of previous years, emphasizing the seasonal annoyance of extended warmth in what should be autumn.
James Morrison and the Human Conditioning
The discourse takes a philosophical turn, with a nod to Jim Morrison’s poetic style, contemplating the fight between day and night temperatures. The speaker emotionally connects urban heat to human experience, stating that continuous heat fosters a sense of discomfort and dirtiness and makes one eager to retreat indoors—an analogy that could extend metaphorically to mental or emotional states during stressful periods.