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Home  »  Specimens of American Poetry  »  James Gates Percival (1795–1856)

Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.

By The Serenade

James Gates Percival (1795–1856)

SOFTLY the moonlight

Is shed on the lake,

Cool is the summer night—

Wake! O awake!

Faintly the curfew

Is heard from afar,

List ye! O list!

To the lively guitar.

Trees cast a mellow shade

Over the vale,

Sweetly the serenade

Breathes in the gale,

Softly and tenderly

Over the lake,

Gaily and cheerily—

Wake! O awake!

See the light pinnace

Draws nigh to the shore,

Swiftly it glides

At the heave of the oar,

Cheerily plays

On its buoyant car,

Nearer and nearer

The lively guitar.

Now the wind rises

And ruffles the pine,

Ripples foam-crested

Like diamonds shine,

They flash, where the waters

The white pebbles lave,

In the wake of the moon,

As it crosses the wave.

Bounding from billow

To billow, the boat

Like a wild swan is seen

On the waters to float;

And the light dipping oars

Bear it smoothly along

In time to the air

Of the Gondolier’s song.

And high on the stern

Stands the young and the brave,

As love-led he crosses

The star-spangled wave,

And blends with the murmur

Of water and grove

The tones of the night,

That are sacred to love.

His gold-hilted sword

At his bright belt is hung,

His mantle of silk

On his shoulder is flung,

And high waves the feather,

That dances and plays

On his cap where the buckle

And rosary blaze.

The maid from the lattice

Looks down on the lake,

To see the foam sparkle,

The bright billow break,

And to hear in his boat,

Where he shines like a star,

Her lover so tenderly

Touch his guitar.

She opens the lattice,

And sits in the glow

Of the moonlight and starlight,

A statue of snow;

And she sings in a voice,

That is broken with sighs,

And she darts on her lover

The light of her eyes.

His love-speaking pantomine

Tells her his soul—

How wild in that sunny clime

Hearts and eyes roll.

She waves with her white hand

Her white fazzolett,

And her burning thoughts flash

From her eyes’ living jet.

The moonlight is hid

In a vapor of snow;

Her voice and his rebeck

Alternately flow;

Re-echoed they swell

From the rock on the hill;

They sing their farewell,

And the music is still.