His Lunacy had taken over his sanity one more time as he walked mindlessly towards a huddle of trees he liked to call a jungle. Legs dangling from the small depression his eyes were fixated on the full moon. He loved to sit here where he could listen to the melody of the flowing water. There was something about this ambiance. This place was he thought, had something to it. The moonlight filtered through the thick trees and illuminated the scape. The calm water shone in the night. He realized that it was not only him who was an addict to the moonlight but the entire scape seemed to be intoxicated by it.
Apart from all of this, the moonlight had a queer effect on him. It was only in the moonlight that his split personality disorder took a beautiful turn and all his personalities would take a physical form and gave him company and as soon as the night was over they would disappear. In these conversations that he had with his four "friends," he realizes that all of them are special. While he listens to the conversations that they are having he concludes that they suffer from a mild forgetfulness that is preventing them from knowing who they are.
As the night grows and the forgetful conversations turn into meaningful discussions he understands that the artist, the poet, the geometer, and the craftsman are all masters of their respective art and not only this but their conversations hint that they know each other as well but are having difficulty remembering it. In the last hour of the night when the first streak of light sears the night and his four personalities start to slowly fade away, it is in that moment that he realizes that there should be a way to bring them all together in a manner that their suffering ends. In a manner that they rediscover themselves and in a manner that they can also cure their forgetfulness. He believes that architecture and concerned design would play a major role in doing all of that. Whenever the majestic full moon shines over his design those four personalities would have the entire night to them to find themselves to cure themselves and ultimately cure the architect.