moon·​gleyd  |  /mun gleɪd/

Moonglade

 

Moonglade is a poetic blend for the shimmering line of the moonlight’s reflection on water. It’s first use is credited to the 19th century American poet and diplomat James Russell Lowell.

English sailors are thought to have coined  the term moonwake, reflecting how the light mimicked the white wash of a ship’s wake. The Swedes call it mångata, meaning the moon road. The Turkish gumusservi compares the tapered reflection to a silver cypress tree upon the water.

In Latin, the dulcet marmoris describes the shining surface of the sea, although not necessarily under moonlight. It stems from marmor, meaning marble, as in the marbling of the water’s surface.

The meanings of both moon and glade have shifted over time. In Middle English, glade didn’t just refer to a clearing in woodland. It could also describe a bright patch in a cloudy sky. Earth’s Moon, known as Luna in Latin and Selene by the Greeks, was named before more moons were discovered orbiting other planets, after which it evolved into a generic term for any planet’s natural satellites, which some argue has left our Moon nameless.

Japan’s springtime tradition of hanami (flower viewing) is complimented by tsukimi, the moon viewing festival of autumn. During tsukimi, observers may contemplate the melancholy proverb “mirror flower, water moon” (kyoka suigetsu), which speaks of something desirable you can see but never reach – like a flower in a mirror or the Moon over water.

 

Introduction     Aeolian     Alpenglow   

Apricity    Asperous

Benthos    Crepuscular    Crispate    Crown shyness

Desire lines    Dreich     Endragoned    Edgelands

Frondescence    Fumarole     Gluggaveður    Gossamer

Gullflass    Haar    Ichnite    Jabble

Karst    Komorebi    Lawrence    Long acre

Machair    Monkeys wedding    Moonglade

-ness    Okta     Oronsey    Petrichor

Psithurism     Quartz    Rakuyou     Roaring forties

Snag    Soft estate    Specular, diffuse and pellucid

Spoondrift     Steam fog    Swash zone     Sylvan

Tellurian and thalassic     Terracettes    Uliginous

Virga     Verglas    Wood wide web

Xeric    Yarpha    Zephyr(us)