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Home  »  The American National Song-Book  »  Edward Conway Jones (1820–1865)

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

Washington to His Troops

Edward Conway Jones (1820–1865)

HARK! the signal gun, its thunder

Floating on the tranquil air;

Soldiers, rise! nor fear, nor wonder,

That the enemy are near.

On the might of God relying,

To the foe we’ll never yield;

All their legions still defying,

We can face them on the field.

Think of home, and all its treasures,

Wives and children, parents dear;

Think of all their plunder’d treasures—

Can ye then stand idly here?

They have ground us by oppression—

We awake to feel it now;

Never be it our confession,

That to England’s king we bow.

Can a monarch’s soft persuasion

Close the breach, or heal the smart?

Not while in a freeman’s bosom

Throbs there still a freeman’s heart.

Can the threat of venom’d fury,

Back’d by regal power, amaze?

Yes, ’twill do for servile minions;

Freemen have an arm to raise.

Perish every bland entreaty—

Tyrants, they assuage in vain;

Here we bid you wreak your vengeance,

Never shall it forge the chain.

Onward! ’neath that banner rally,

Britons let your courage see;

Onward! to the glorious sally,

Strike the blow for liberty!