Tonight's full moon is known as the Buck Moon. It's a treat because it is a supermoon and the first of four consecutive supermoons - bigger than usual full moons - throughout the summer. I doubt North Georgia will see much of July's full moon as the region will experience smoke, haze and evening thunderstorms throughout the week. That means my experience of this year's event relies on viewing a waxing gibbous moon tonight bolstered by memory and imagination. For many years I was fortunate to live about two hundred feet from the Atlantic surf - and sometimes in it - where I watched many moons rise out of the sea.
It was always a sublime event powered by the realization that you were a witness to a sensory immersion experienced by coastal inhabitants for tens of housands of years. The simplicity always amazed me. Here was a man, a strip of sand, a horizon of water, all under a dome of sky and caressed by the touch of wind and the sound of surf. Add the rising moon and expect the surreal. The experience was so powerful even when friends joined me on the porch the conversations almost always stopped in homage when the first moon sliver appeared.
Lowcountry moonrise, McQueens Island, Savannah, Georgia, 1951 |
“. . . Her eyes, he says, are stars at dusk,
Her mouth as sweet as red-rose-musk;
And when she dances his young heart swells
With flutes and viols and silver bells;
His brain is dizzy, his senses swim,
When she slants her ragtime eyes at him.
Moonlight shadows, he bids her see,
Move no more silently than she.
It was this way, he says, she came,
Into his cold heart, bearing flame.
And now that his heart is all on fire
Will she refuse his heart's desire? . . .”
When the Buck Moon and other supermoons climb high this summer, go outside. Take a friend, maybe someone you love.
Get lost in it.
Get lost in it.
Sources
Photos and Illustrations:
National Park Service, Fort Pulaski National Monument Handbook, 1954
Text:
intro quotation, William Blake, Songs of Innocence and Experience, originally published in 1789.
poem excerpt, Conrad Aiken, "Turns and Movies: VI," Violet Moore and Bert Moore
Photos and Illustrations:
National Park Service, Fort Pulaski National Monument Handbook, 1954
Text:
intro quotation, William Blake, Songs of Innocence and Experience, originally published in 1789.
poem excerpt, Conrad Aiken, "Turns and Movies: VI," Violet Moore and Bert Moore
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