William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
Ode: Wide oer the wilderness of wavesTune—“Whilst happy in my native land”
W
Untrack’d by human peril,
Our fathers roam’d for peaceful graves,
To deserts dark and sterile.
No parting pang, no long adieu
Delay’d their gallant daring;
With them, their gods and country too,
Their pilgrim keels were bearing.
All hearts unite the patriot band:
Be liberty our natal land.
In terror o’er the ocean;
From fortune and from man they fled,
To Heaven and its devotion.
Fate cannot bend the high-born mind
To bigot usurpation;
They, who had left a world behind,
Now gave that world a nation.
By valour’s arm protected,
To plant an empire brave and free,
Their sacred views directed:
But more they fear’d than tyrants’ yoke
Insidious faction’s fury;
For oft a worm destroys an oak,
Whose leaf that worm would bury.
And claim’d our sovereign charter;
Her life-blood warm from Adams rose,
And all her sons from Sparta.
Be free, Columbia! proudest name
Fame’s herald wafts in story;
Be free, thou youngest child of Fame;
Rule, brightest heir of glory!
Hath Afric’s towers dejected:
And Lybia’s sands have flash’d with fire,
From Eaton’s sword reflected.
Thy groves, which erst the hill or plain
Entrench’d from savage plunder,
To Naiads turn’d, must cleave the main,
And sport with Neptune’s thunder.