Literary references to "pear" as a color are rare and subtle, often evoking the soft, natural hues of ripeness and decay rather than offering bold, primary shades. In a few texts the pear’s muted greens, yellows, and rustic tomes emerge as symbols of change and impermanence. For instance, one writer uses the image of a bruised, rusty pear to evoke the wear of time and nature’s inevitable decline [1], while another contrasts the gentle glow of a sky behind pear-blossom with the tender, ephemeral quality of light that seems to mirror the fruit’s understated palette [2]. In such passages, the color “pear” is not named explicitly as a hue but is implied through the natural imagery of orchards and ripening fruit, lending an organic, transient quality to the descriptions.