William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
Jefferson and Liberty1801Y
Which the arms of your fathers so valiantly gain’d,
Like the sun, unobscured, may your glory arise,
And your liberties flourish, forever unstained.
While Mars, clad in gore,
Bids the far thunders roar,
May freedom and peace bless our dear native shore:
“And ne’er may the sons of Columbia be slaves,
While the earth bears a plant, or the sea rolls in waves.”
To lead the brave sons of Columbia in slavery;
Their force we’ve withstood, and their power defied,
And repulsed each attack with republican bravery;
Though our internal foes
May our freedom oppose,
Our firmness and zeal to the universe shows,
That ne’er will, &c.
Have kindled the fire of faction around us;
Yet, unawed by the flame, we united arise,
To pull down the Babel that strove to confound us.
All intrigue is in vain;
We’ll united remain,
And our rights and our liberties ever maintain.
And ne’er shall, &c.
To blast our republican’s fair reputation:
But Jefferson still is America’s choice,
And he will her liberties guard from invasion.
’Tis the wretches who wait
To unite church and state
That the names of M’Kean, truth, and Jefferson hate;
But ne’er will, &c.
Intrigue there may triumph, and vice be defended;
How true to their God and our laws they appear,
Whilst destroying that freedom for which we contended!
Like the serpent of old,
Whilst array’d in fine gold,
The arrows of death and destruction they hold.
But ne’er will, &c.
Unawed and unmoved by the thunder of faction:
Let all true Americans join hand and hand,
And witness this day their heartfelt satisfaction.
His much honour’d name,
And his virtue and fame,
In triumphant strains to the world we’ll proclaim,
And ne’er will, &c.
By which noble charter our freedom we cherish:
At the helm of our nation, then, Jefferson place,
That our free constitution and rights never perish.
Still America’s pride
In her cause has been tried,
And he in her council was born to preside:
That ne’er shall, &c.