The Lake of the Dismal Swamp

Thomas Moore

1779 to 1852

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And the boat return’d no more.
And I’ll hide the maid in a cypress tree,
But oft, from the Indian hunter’s camp,
And she’s gone to the Lake of the Dismal Swamp,
The flesh with blistering dew!
“They made her a grave, too cold and damp
Till he hollow’d a boat of the birchen bark,
She paddles her white canoe.
His path was rugged and sore,
To cross the Lake by a fire-fly lamp,
For a soul so warm and true;
And man never trod before.
Quick over its surface play’d—
And near him the she-wolf stirr’d the brake,
The name of the death-cold maid.
If slumber his eyelids knew,
“And her fire-fly lamp I soon shall see,
This lover and maid so true
Its venomous tear and nightly steep
The wind was high and the clouds were dark,
And the white canoe of my dear?”
“Welcome,” he said, “my dear one’s light!”
He saw the Lake, and a meteor bright
And paddle their white canoe!
Through many a fen where the serpent feeds,
He lay where the deadly vine doth weep
And when on the earth he sunk to sleep,
Long and loving our life shall be,
And the dim shore echoed for many a night
“Oh! when shall I see the dusky Lake,
Written at Norfolk, in Virginia
Away to the Dismal Swamp he speeds—
Where, all night long, by a fire-fly lamp,
And the copper-snake breath’d in his ear,
When the footstep of death is near.”
Till he starting cried, from his dream awake,
Are seen at the hour of midnight damp
And her paddle I soon shall hear;
Far, far he follow’d the meteor spark,
Which carried him off from shore;
Through tangled juniper, beds of reeds,

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