Clair de Lune

Today’s the birthday of French composer Claude Debussy, 1862 – 1918. One of his best-loved pieces is this, “Clair de Lune.”  Its title comes from a poem by Paul Verlaine, written in  1869.  

The last verse of the poem reads (translated from the French):

With the sad and beautiful moonlight,
Which sets the birds in the trees dreaming,
And makes the fountains sob with ecstasy,
The tall slim water streams among the marble statues.

 

Tonight would surely be a great night to go outside and look at the moon.

Have You Ever Really Seen the Moon?

A lovely short video from Wylie Overstreet and Alex Gorosh. Amateur astronomer Overstreet set up his telescope outside on the streets of Los Angeles and let strangers look through it. They were all amazed by what they saw. “Oh my god. That’s the moon?”

Says Overstreet, “It makes you realize that we’re all on a small little planet, and we all have the same reaction to the universe we live in. . . . It’s a great reminder that we should look up more often.”

More here, from The Atlantic:

On a whim, Wylie Overstreet set up his telescope outside his apartment. He wanted to look at the moon. He had no idea he would, in a matter of hours, inspire awe in hundreds of strangers on the streets of Los Angeles. “It’s incredible how many people have never looked through a telescope,” Alex Gorosh, a friend of Overstreet’s, told The Atlantic.“Many people thought the image wasn’t real—they thought we were playing a prank on them.”

Overstreet and Gorosh were so taken by strangers’ reactions to the moon through their telescope that the friends began to set it up in different locations across the city, filming as they went. “That’s when we recognized the powerful message of unity that we were capturing,” said Gorosh.

Their resulting film, A New View of the Moon, is a simple tribute to human wonder. Like last year’s total solar eclipse, Overstreet and Gorosh witnessed how a cosmic event has the power to bring people together. “It’s about taking a step back and appreciating the beauty and grandeur of the natural world around us,” said Gorosh. “It sounds cheesy, but if we were able to do that more often, it would be much easier to work through the divisions that we’re facing as a culture.”

Mr. Moonlight

And just for fun, and because it may be the worst song The Beatles ever recorded, there’s this:

Galileo’s Moons

Galileo Galilei’s drawings of the Moon, as observed through his telescope. Previously, it was thought that the Moon was a perfectly smooth sphere.

Galileo's Moon Drawings

From Signor Galileo’s 1610 treatise “Sidereus Nuncius” (“Starry Messenger”). Thanks again to Stephan Ellcock on Facebook for the image.