William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
Enterprise of Lieut. SomersT
All hearts were warm’d by valour’s glow,
And eager to chastise the foe
For acts of daring robbery.
With ten bold seamen in his train,
Tripoli’s port resolved to gain,
And mar each wall and battery.
(Wadsworth was there, and Israel, brave!)
Nor thought of danger, nor a grave:
Their thoughts were on the enemy.
Of strong gunpowder had a store,
And bomb-shells too she likewise bore—
Dread instruments of misery!
The enemy appear’d in view;
Two boats approach’d, with each a crew
Of fifty sons of Tripoli.
Determined, cool, form’d to command,
The match of death in his right hand,
Scorning a life of slavery.
The mangled foe the welkin ride:—
Whirling aloft, brave Somers cried,
“A glorious death or liberty!”
Impetuous through the vault of Heaven,
And infidels, by terror riven,
With shrieks rent heaven’s canopy.
The bomb-shells thundering o’er his head,
Whilst, strew’d along, the countless dead
Lay prone on earth in agony.
Upon the faithless, guilty foe,
When Barron with his fleet shall go,
And storm that den of roguery.
In ruins lay their castle’s walls,
Whilst, wrapp’d in flames, each mansion falls,
And women sue for clemency.
With mercy so to temper power,
That Virtue shall not on you lour
An eye that looks severity.
Recross, in liberty, the main,
Freed, with his crew, from galling chain,
And dungeon’s gloomy tenantry.