<h2><SPAN name="topic17" id="topic17"></SPAN>Moonlight</h2>
<p>The beautiful California days, with warm sunshine tempered by
the cool winds from the bay, are not surpassed in any country under
the sun. But if the <i>days</i> are perfect, the brilliant
moonlight nights lose nothing by comparison.</p>
<p>To tramp the hills and woods, or climb the rugged mountains by
day, is a joy to the nature lover. But the same trip by moonlight
has an interest and charm entirely its own, and mysteries of nature
are revealed undreamed of at noonday.</p>
<p>The wind, that has run riot during the day, has blown itself out
by evening, and the birds have gone to sleep with heads tucked
under their wings, or settled with soft breasts over nestlings that
twitter soft "good nights" to mother love. The dark shadows of
evening steal the daylight, and cañon and ravine lose their
rugged outlines, blending into soft, shadowy browns and purples.
The moon peeps over the hilltop, the stars come out one by one, the
day is swallowed up in night, and the moonlight waves its pale wand
over the landscape.</p>
<p>In the deep woods it flickers through the branches, mottling the
ground with silver patches, and throwing into grand relief the
trunks of trees, like sentinels on duty. It touches the little
brook as softly as a baby's kiss, and transforms it into a sheen of
gold. It drops its yellow light upon a bed of ferns until each
separate frond stands out like a willow plume nodding up and down
in the mellow gleam. A flowering dogwood bathed in its ethereal
light shimmers like a bridal veil adorning a wood nymph. It lays
its gentle touch on the waterfall, transforming it into a torrent
of molten silver, and causing each drop to glisten like topaz under
its witching light.</p>
<p>Overhead fleecy clouds, like white-winged argosies, sail high
amid the blue, or, finer spun, like a lady's veil, are drawn,
gauzelike, across the sky, through which the stars peep out with
twinkling brilliancy. The scent of new-mown hay laden with falling
dew comes floating up from the valley with an intoxicating
sweetness, a sweetness to which the far-famed perfume of Arabia is
not to be compared.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/147.jpg" target="blank" name="image147" id="image147"> <ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src="images/147.jpg" alt="THE WITCHERY OF MOONLIGHT" /></SPAN>THE WITCHERY OF MOONLIGHT</div>
<p>The crickets, those little black minstrels of the night, chirp
under the log upon which you are resting, and the katydids repeat
over and over again "Katy's" wonderful achievement, though just
what this amazing conquest was no one has been able to discover.
The cicadas join the chorus with their strident voices, their notes
fairly tumbling over each other in their exuberance, and in their
hurry to sing their solos. Tree toads tune up for the evening
concert, a few short notes at first, like a violinist testing the
strings, then, the pitch ascertained, the air fairly vibrates with
their rhapsody.</p>
<p>Fireflies light their tiny lanterns and flash out their signals,
like beacon lights in the darkness, while, ringing up from the
valley, the call of the whip-poor-will echoes clear and sweet, each
syllable pronounced as distinctly as if uttered by a human voice.
In a tree overhead a screech owl emits his evening call in a clear,
vibrating tremolo, as if to warn the smaller birds that he is on
watch, and considers them his lawful prey. The night hawk wheels in
his tireless flight, graceful as a thistledown, soaring through
space without a seeming motion of the wings, emitting a whirring
sound from wings and tail feathers, and darting, now and again,
with the swiftness of light after some insect that comes under his
keen vision.</p>
<p>If you remain quite still, you may perchance detect a
cotton-tail peeping at you from some covert. Watch him closely, and
do not move a muscle, and when his curiosity is somewhat appeased,
see him thump the ground with his hind foot, trying to scare you
into revealing your identity. If not disturbed, his fear will
vanish, and he will gambol almost at your feet.</p>
<p>You are fortunate indeed, if, on your nightly rambles, you find
one of the large night moths winging its silent flight over the
moonlit glade, resting for an instant on a mullein-stalk, then
dancing away in his erratic flight, like some pixy out for a
lark.</p>
<p>O the witchery of moonlight nights, when tree, shrub, and meadow
are bathed in a sheen of silver; when lovers walk arm in arm, and
in soft whisperings build air castles for the days to come, when
the honeysuckle shall twine around their doorway, and the moonlight
rest like a benediction on their own home nest; when you sit on the
porch with day's work done, and the fireflies dance over the lawn,
and the voice of the whip-poor-will floats up from the meadow, and
you dream dreams, and weave strange fancies, under the witching
spell of the silver moonlight!</p>
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<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/topic18.png" target="blank"><ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src= "images/topic18.png" alt="Mount Tamalpais" /></SPAN></div>
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