Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} In Greek mythology, according to Plutarch, the 7th century BC Greek poet Alcman said that Ersa Template:IPAc-en or Herse Template:IPAc-en (Template:Langx, Template:Langx, literally "dew"), the personification of dew, is the daughter of Zeus and the Moon (Selene).<ref>Hard, p. 46; ní Mheallaigh, p. 26; Keightley, p. 55. According to Hard, "this is really no more than an allegorical fancy referring to the heavy dew-fall associated with clear moonlit nights", while Keightley calls this a "pleasing fiction" of Alcman, and says that "The moon was naturally, though incorrectly, regarded as the cause of dew, and nothing therefore was more obvious than to say that the dew was the progeny of the moon and sky personified after the usual manner of the Greeks".</ref> Plutarch writes:

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