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William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.

The Navy

WHEN Fame shall tell the splendid story

Of Columbia’s naval glory,

Since first victorious o’er the deep

Our eagle-flag was seen to sweep:

The glowing tale will form a page,

To grace the annals of the age,

And teach our sons to proudly claim

The brightest meed of naval fame.

In lofty strains the bard shall tell

How Truxton fought, how Somers fell!

How gallant Preble’s daring host

Triumph’d along the Moorish coast;

Forced the proud Infidel to treat,

And brought the crescent to their feet!

And mark, amidst the splendid band

That guards Columbia’s boundless strand,

The youthful hero of the wave,

Decatur, bravest of the brave!

And Rodgers, whose triumphant name

Sounds from the trump of future fame!

And, O! forget not in the song

That bears my country’s fame along,

Victorious Hull, and conquering Jones,

Columbia’s own intrepid sons!

Whose matchless skill, and well served thunder,

Struck the proud flag of England under;

And threw, by hearts of freemen brave,

The British lion in the wave.

Masters of verse! O, still proclaim

In song sublime their glorious fame,

Till time evolves the fated day

That sweeps these Union-States away;

Or, verging from its sinking shore,

The rolling ocean foams no more!

And who that hears this splendid story,

This brilliant tale of naval glory,

Feels not the patriot-warmth and fire

Of prophecy his soul inspire?

—Lifting the eternal veil away

That shrouds futurity from day;

And, after many a deed that cheers

The distant days of future years,

Reads upon every standard high,

That waves our eagle to the sky,

(With warm delight and proud emotion,)

“Columbia, mistress of the ocean!”