Moonlight

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HE feigned a fine indifference
  To be so prodigal of light,
  Knowing his piteous twisted things
  Would lose the crooked marks of spite
  When only moonbeams fit the dusk
  And made his wicked world seem right.


  But we forget so soon the shame,
  Conceiving sweetness if we can
  Heaven the citadel itself
  Illumined on the lunar plan;
  And I the chief of sinners, I
  The middlemost Victorian!


  Now I shall ride the misty lake
  With my own love, and speak so low
  That not a fishy thing shall hear
  The secrets passing to and fro
  Amid the moonlight poetries.
  O moonshine, how unman us so?

© John Crowe Ransom