A glassy surface as still as the night
Darkness pierced by a luminous glare
The shine of the moon reflecting so bright
Waters unmoving, a nighttime delight
The glow of the moon so pale, so fair
A glassy surface as still as the night
Magnificent figures bask in the light
Trees hanging over as far as they dare
The shine of the moon reflecting so bright
Above a swan soars, wings spread in its flight
Mist blows across with the grace of a mare
A glassy surface as still as the night
The glow in the sky such a radiant white
So wonderfully calm that's its hard to bear
The shine of the moon reflecting so bright
This scene, this place, what a beautiful sight
Sensations of wonder float through the air
A glassy surface as still as the night
The shine of the moon reflecting so bright
After learning about the Villanelle in class, I was intrigued by its strange form and use of repetition, and decided eventually to give it a go. It took me a while -as I'd anticipated- to get the rhymes working and everything sounding alright, but I think turned out okay. Sort of. Up until this point I had read entire websites filled to the brim with poetry about beaches, the sky, and some other of the usual suspects for nature-themed poetry. But I had this image in my mind of a moon reflecting on a glassy lake, and since I hadn't found anything yet, I decided to run with it and see where it went. On a side note, the image associated with this villanelle in the calendar I had to make using a 3D graphics package and a little image manipulation magic, since I couldn't exactly walk down to the local lake and find the moon reflecting picturesquely off of the perfectly glassy water.
The majority of the poem is imagery, designed to describe this moonlit lakeside scene to the viewer. Obviously, the lines "A glassy surface as still as the night" and "The shine of the moon reflecting so bright" are repeated several times each throughout the course of the poem, as this is part of the definition of a villanelle. There is additional repetition with "So pale, so fair" and "This scene, this place." Each line of the poem consists of roughly ten syllables broken into three groups of three syllables followed by the final rhyming word, and the two lines which are not are designed to be read with an intentional pause so that they maintain the same rhythm as the rest of the poem (this pause happens naturally when you read the poem). There is consonance in the repeated line "A glassy surface as still as the night," which I found helps the line flow better and feel much smoother.
It would be cheating to try and claim I did this intentionally, but the line lengths alternate between getting longer and shorter each stanza, make the poem look a little like ripples in water if you turn your head to the right.