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Home  »  The American National Song-Book  »  Thomas Wells

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

The Battle of New Orleans

Thomas Wells

CHILL was the breeze,—nor yet the herald light

Had chased the lingering shadows of the night;

O’er still expanse of lake, and marshy bed,

Gloomy and dense the mantling vapours spread:—

But soon the battle flash that darkness broke,

And soon, that dread repose, the peal awoke

Of loud artillery, and the dire alarms

Of mingling conflict, and the clash of arms.

Fate gave the word!—and now, by veterans led,

In pride of chivalry, to conquest bred,

The foe advanced—intrench’d, the champion band

Of freemen stood, the bulwark of the land;

Fearless their stars unfurl’d, and, as the rock,

Storm-proof, they stood, impervious to the shock:

Their patriot chief, with patriot ardour fired—

Nerved every hand, and every heart inspired;

Himself, in peril’s trying hour, a host,

A nation’s rescue, and a nation’s boast;—

Empower’d alike to govern or to save,

To guide a people, or their sword to wave.

As near the bastion’d wall the invader drew,

A storm of iron hail to greet him flew;

On havoc’s wing the mission’d vengeance rode,

And whole platoons the scythe of ruin mow’d;

Through paths of blood, o’er undistinguish’d slain,

Unyoked, the hungry war-dogs scour’d the plain;

Borne on the blast, the scattering besom kept

Its course, and ranks on ranks promiscuous swept;—

The trophied Lion fell,—while o’er his foes

Unscathed, in arms supreme, the towering Eagle rose.

Sublime in majesty,—matchless in might—

Columbia stood, unshaken in the fight:

From lips of adamant, midst volumed smoke

And cataracts of fire, her thunders spoke

In triumph to the skies; from shore to shore,

Old Mississippi shook, and echoed to the roar.

High on his sceptred perch, our mountain bird,

Amidst the din the shout of Victory heard—

Exulting heard, and from his eyry came

Through rolling war-clouds, and through sheets of flame;

Renown’s immortal meed he bore, and spread

His ample pinions o’er the conqueror’s head—

The Hero of the West—to him assign’d

The glorious palm, and round his brows the guerdon twined.