William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
The Pilot of HatterasPhilip Freneau (17521832)
I
While here we furl the sail,
No longer vainly lab’ring on
Against the western gale;
Whilst here thy bare and barren cliffs,
O Hatteras, I survey,
And shallow grounds and broken reefs,
What shall provoke my lay?
He shoves his bark so frail,
And, hurrying on, with busy hands,
Employs both oar and sail.
Beneath his own unsettled sky
Content to pass his years,
No other shores delight his eye,
No prowling foe he fears.
No quiet harbour plann’d,
And penury his constant guest,
Restrains the pirate band:
His hopes are all in yonder flock,
And some few hives of bees,
Except when bound for Ocracock
The gliding barque he sees.
And spreads his tottering sails,
While waving high her handkerchief,
Her commodore she hails—
She grieves and fears to see no more
The sail that now forsakes,
From Hatteras’ sands to banks of Core
Such tedious journeys makes.
Restrain those idle fears—
Can you, that should relieve his pain,
Thus kill him with your tears?
Can absence thus beget regard,
Or does it only seem?—
He comes to see a wandering bard
That aims for Ashley’s stream.
No danger shall be near;
On yonder shoals the billows break,
But leave us quiet here—
With gills of rum, and pints of gin,
Again your lad shall land,
And drink—till he and all his kin
Can neither sit nor stand.