William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
A Sailors Elegy, on the Fate of the WaspO!
Stout warriors yield at Fate’s rude call,
They fall, like shooting stars at night,
And brighten as they fall.
And with the story never tire,
A country mourns their noble fate,
And ladies weep, and men admire.
I mourn, in this rough sailor strain,
Who perish’d—how, no mortal knows,
And perish’d all in vain.
How Blakeley brought the red-cross low,
And twice triumphantly did quell
The prowess of a valiant foe?
All valiant hearts of sterling gold
Who braved the lion in his den,
And turn’d his hot blood into cold?
Escaped the ocean’s perils rude,
To share our country’s welcome cheer,
And reap a nation’s gratitude?
To claim the welcome of their home;
Affection looks for them in vain;
Too surely they will never come.
They perish’d in the yawning deep,
Where there was none to stretch a hand,
And none their fate to weep.
Heard o’er the desert wave;
Their dying struggle met no eye,
No friendly aid to save.
Nor where their bones are laid—
The spot Affection loves so well,
No mourner’s step will tread.
To seek the spot where they abide,
Nor child, or widow, full of wo,
Tell how, and when, and where they died.
No mound to mark the spot;
They moulder in the deep, deep wave,
Just where—it matters not.
A few will weep these sailors bold,
For e’er the certain news shall come,
Our feelings will grow cold.
And when the anxious feeling’s o’er,
Stale Memory will quench her fire,
And sorrow be no more!
By grief, or madness cross’d,
Shall cling to one dear hope alone,
And hope, though hope were lost.
Or ideal visions driven,
O! she will ne’er believe him dead,
Till they do meet in heaven.