"Moon over North Point Cove", taken with a
Canon 5d camera, Circa 2006.
"AND
THE MOON BE STILL AS BRIGHT" *
Late one
night, several years ago, I awakened to
an effervescent glow squeezing through
the mini-blinds of my bedroom windows.
For some reason I had retired early, so
-- amid the whitewash of light flowing
into the room -- instead of yanking my
current I-can't-go-to-sleep book from
the nightstand and reading until I
nodded off, I wandered out onto the
chilly lakefront deck.
The full circle of moon was so bright my
body cast long shadows on the decking.
From nowhere a thick cloud drifted
across the moon's yellow face, and like
an opaque curtain being drawn over a
window, the moonlight flicked off: a
cosmic lightswitch had been thrown. In
the crushing dark, pinpoints of stars
burst into existence, their
constellations leaping out against the
blackened sky. Then, as the marauding
cloud swept clear of the moon, the
momentary star shine was once again
swallowed up in the harsh rush of
moonlight. I raised my hand and let its
eerie shadow fall across my face.
What a
mystery this moon has been for
millennia, even now that science has
managed to stamp the footprint of
civilization onto its surface. I spread
my fingers and let the moonlight streak
through. "And the moon be still as
bright."
Yes. Exactly.
And then
I went to get my camera and tripod.
*from the
poem, "So We'll Go No More a Roving", by
George Gordon, Lord Byron
Used as
Parting Shot in the Daily Herald's
Lake Magazine.

