James and Mary Ford, eds. Every Day in the Year. 1902.
September 23Victory of the Bonhomme Richard over the Serapis
By Philip Freneau (17521832)
O
The guardian of a numerous fleet,
Serapis from the Baltic came;
A ship of less tremendous force
Sailed by her side the self-same course,
Countess of Scarb’ro, was her name.
Full forty guns Serapis bore,
And Scarb’ro’s Countess twenty-four,
Manned with old England’s boldest tars—
What flag that rides the Gallic seas
Shall dare attack such piles as these,
Designed for tumults and for wars!
’Twas Jones, brave Jones, to battle led
As bold a crew as ever bled
Upon the sky-surrounded main;
The standards of the Western World
Were to the willing winds unfurled,
Denying Britain’s tyrant reign.
The Alliance next; with these combine
The Gallic ship they Pallas call;
The Vengeance, armed with sword and flame,
These to attack the Britons came—
But two accomplished all.
Go on, great man, to daunt the foe,
And bid the haughty Britons know
They to our Thirteen Stars shall bend;
Those Stars that, veiled in dark attire,
Long glimmered with a feeble fire,
But radiant now ascend.
In western, not in eastern, skies,
Fair Freedom’s reign restored—
So when the Magi, come from far
Beheld the God-attending Star,
They trembled and adored.