William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
Repeal of the Stamp ActO
Fair Liberty! thou lovely goddess! hear!
Have we not woo’d thee, won thee, held thee long?
Lain in thy lap and melted on thy tongue:
Through death’s and danger’s rugged path pursued,
And led thee, smiling, to this solitude:
Hid thee within our hearts’ most golden cell,
And braved the powers of earth and powers of hell.
Goddess! we cannot part: thou must not fly—
Be slaves! we dare to scorn it—dare to die.
Thine ears, remorseless G——le, thine, O B—te,
To you, bless’d patriots, we our cause submit—
Illustrious Camden—Britain’s guardian Pitt—
Recede not—frown not—rather let us be,
Deprived of being than of liberty.
Let fraud or malice blacken all our crimes,
No disaffection stains these peaceful climes:
O save us, shield us, from impending woes:
The foes of Britain, only, are our foes.
While honest Freedom struggles with her chain;
But know, the sons of virtue, hardy, brave,
Disdain to lose through mean despair to save:
Aroused, in thunder, awful, they appear,
With proud deliverance stalking in their rear.
While tyrant foes their pallid fears betray,
Shrink from their arms, and give their vengeance way:
See! in the unequal war, oppressors fall,
The hate, contempt, and endless curse of all.
Our hearts bend grateful to our sovereign lord.
Hail, darling monarch! by this act endear’d,
Our firm affections are thy best reward.
Should Britain’s self against herself divide,
And hostile armies frown on either side—
Should hosts, rebellious, shake our Brunswick’s throne,
And as they dared thy parent, dare the son,
To this asylum stretch thine happy wing,
And we’ll contend who best shall serve our king.