William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
To the Memory of Edward Rutledge, Esq.Philip Freneau (17521832)
R
In virtue firm, in honour clear,
One of the worthies of our age,
Rutledge! resigns his station here.
And form’d by Nature to excel,
From early Rome and ancient Greece
He modell’d all his actions well.
Or ravage these devoted lands,
He our firm league of freedom sign’d,
And counsell’d how to break their bands.
He took his part with manly pride;
His spirit o’er these regions flew,
The patriots’ and the soldiers’ guide.
Amongst our brightest stars he moved,
The Lees, the Moultries, Sumters, Greenes—
By all admired, by all beloved.
He dared all foreign force oppose,
Till, from a tyrant’s ashes cold,
The mighty pile of freedom rose.
When Peace resumed her joyous reign,
With laurel-wreaths and twining bays
He sought less active life again.
From Misery’s eye to dry the tear,
He stood where Justice guards the laws,
At once humane, at once severe.
So ardent in affairs of state;
’Twas not that he in armies shined
That made him so completely great:
He spoke—all hush’d, and all were awed;
From all he said conviction sprung,
And crowds were eager to applaud.
The tender husband, friend sincere;
The parent, patriot, sage, approved,
Had now survived his fiftieth year—
That Carolina could bestow;
Presiding o’er that potent state,
Where streams of wealth and plenty flow;
To western regions bold and free;
And Commerce, on the Atlantic main,
Wafts her rich stores of industry;
To shine in a sublimer sphere,
Where time to one assemblage brings
All virtuous minds, all hearts sincere.