it is the night lit by the moon best if it’s full that gives strange shadows to familiar things when poets are supposedly inspired to write about their pain their love often the same important thoughts of life and death their joys of the quotidian and that you catch the day and live it like it were your last
you never know just a split second and your life has turned into your past
benignly, though, the moonlight introduces softer thoughts of passion and of the beloved distant in space but always close in mind romantic moments lingering in afterthoughts
some times I think that if it were not for the distance that always separates those who have pined for their reunion the world’s treasure of poetry might just be half of what it is today
the same may well be true for all the lines penned under tears about that unrequited love addressed to those unwilling subjects of desire who often in the course of writing turn into objects of the writers’ ire
the moonlight’s pristine shine in fact a mere reflection of the sun for a few hours of the night changes our vision opens up doors to different worlds full of desire, hope, and desperation allows us glimpses of ourselves that daylight never shows
we feel we can speak words under the pale light of the moon or the dark corners of the night that would not make much sense under the brilliance of the sun
the quiet splendor of the moonlight’s grace lets us experience that other space we tend to close and keep apart in our hasty tour of every day
that’s why in our few calm moments we all should listen to what they our poets have to say about the night the moon’s strange light and how it keeps their thoughts in flight