Then what happens to the moon?
She, who, shy and veiled, slips out before dusk to
take the air of heaven, wandering timidly among the
columned clouds, and fugitive from the staring of the
sun; she, who, when dusk has come, rules the sentient
night with such chaste and icy spell whither
and how does she retreat?
I came on her one morning I
surprised her. She was stealing into a dark
wintry wood, and five little stars were chasing her.
She was orange-hooded, a light-o’-love dismissed unashamed
and unfatigued, having taken all.
And she was looking back with her almond eyes, across
her dark-ivory shoulder, at Night where he still lay
drowned in the sleep she had brought him. What
a strange, slow, mocking look! So might Aphrodite
herself have looked back at some weary lover, remembering
the fire of his first embrace. Insatiate, smiling
creature, slipping down to the rim of the world to
her bath in the sweet waters of dawn, whence emerging,
pure as a water lily, she would float in the cool sky
till evening came again! And just then she saw
me looking, and hid behind a holm-oak tree; but I
could still see the gleam of one shoulder and her
long narrow eyes pursuing me. I went up to the
tree and parted its dark boughs to take her; but she
had slipped behind another. I called to her
to stand, if only for one moment. But she smiled
and went slip ping on, and I ran thrusting through
the wet bushes, leaping the fallen trunks. The
scent of rotting leaves disturbed by my feet leaped
out into the darkness, and birds, surprised, fluttered
away. And still I ran she slipping
ever further into the grove, and ever looking back
at me. And I thought: But I will catch you
yet, you nymph of perdition! The wood will soon
be passed, you will have no cover then! And from
her eyes, and the scanty gleam of her flying limbs,
I never looked away, not even when I stumbled or ran
against tree trunks in my blind haste. And at
every clearing I flew more furiously, thinking to
seize all of her with my gaze before she could cross
the glade; but ever she found some little low tree,
some bush of birch ungrown, or the far top branches
of the next grove to screen her flying body and preserve
allurement. And all the time she was dipping,
dipping to the rim of the world. And then I
tripped; but, as I rose, I saw that she had lingered
for me; her long sliding eyes were full, it seemed
to me, of pity, as if she would have liked for me
to have enjoyed the sight of her. I stood still,
breathless, thinking that at last she would consent;
but flinging back, up into the air, one dark-ivory
arm, she sighed and vanished. And the breath
of her sigh stirred all the birch-tree twigs just coloured
with the dawn. Long I stood in that thicket
gazing at the spot where she had leapt from me over
the edge of the world-my heart quivering.