William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
On the Loss of LEpervierO
Where sadness, else, and gloomy sorrow sweep,
With raven wings through darkness unconfined,
And cheerfulness’ smiles in bondage keep,
Still linger round the cavern of Despair,
And cast, O Hope! one gleam of sunshine there!
In their peculiar energy express’d,
A sister’s tears, the widow’d mother’s sighs,
To thee, O Hope! are at this hour address’d:
No balm of comfort to their hearts is near,
If thou, benignant Power, refuse to hear.
Weeks make up months and months amount to years;
But expectation expectation breeds
And calls on thee to dissipate our fears;—
Yet fears and apprehensions rise in crowds
And strive to shadow o’er thy beams with clouds.
Till scarce one ray the gathering gloom pervades;
Worn-out Suspense no casual doubt bestows,
And Fancy’s lingering twilight’s glimmering fades.
Now sick at heart, from hope deferr’d too long,
The voice of Joy cheers not the mourning throng.
That aches with watching—though it cannot sleep,
Looks through the misty regions of the sky,
And glances o’er the billows of the deep:
In vain the visual shaft pursues its mark—
Shubrick appears not, nor his gallant bark.
Resembles ocean’s limitless abyss,
Where waves on waves in desperate surges roll,
Headlong from precipice to precipice,
Then, breaking on the topmost ridges, bound
In furious whirlpools to the vast profound!
Directs our driving thoughts, nor checks their speed:
O’er the void wilderness they wander wide
From every self-imposed restriction freed,
Tired out, at last, Imagination halts,
And, with dismay, from further search revolts!
With many a bold or plausible surmise;
Contends that, in Affliction’s bitterest cup,
One drop at least of consolation lies;
And bids us still, with confidence, depend
On Him who always was the sufferer’s friend.
So many years in hard captivity,
Should, by Decatur, be released at last,
Merely to sink in yon devouring sea?
And that their friends, upon a distant shore,
Should never feel their warm embraces more?
Afar from home, beneath unfriendly waves,
Whose gallant hearts, with indignation burn’d
To free their countrymen from being slaves—
And who, with so much skill, repell’d the blow,
Which, but for them, had laid our country low?”
Whose patriotic labours have been shown,
The willing muse awards the homage due,
And consecrates your monumental stone,
On which the pen of history shall repeat
The tale of many a daring naval feat.
And fix the applausive look on only one;
And yet, without an eagle’s eye, the muse
Could not at once behold what all have done:
The range is too extensive, and the blaze
Of your exploits o’erpowers the incautious gaze.
Will justify the choice of Yarnall’s name;
Affection for such preference well atones
And saves the poet, in the friend, from blame:
Nor will fraternal fondness, felt so long,
Withhold from him the eulogizing song.
Which diplomatic skill cannot redress,
Calls out her troops of volunteers, in throngs,
An insolent invasion to repress,
And, at her call, her sons in phalanx join,
Breast flanking breast, to wall the lengthen’d line;
Where duty station’d him, young Yarnall stood,
And, with composure, every method tried,
To fill the ranks as often as he could,
Till his brave fallen comrades, round him thrown,
Left him at last to work his guns alone;—
Leap’d from the Lawrence, whilst she yet could swim,
And recognising Yarnall, in his gore,
Conferr’d the desperate management to him,
Who with his eight companions kept the deck
And sprang to triumph from the sinking wreck;—
Such as the world possesses power to give,
His honours are secure; for Yarnall’s name
Must, on the records of his country, live;—
And Perry and Decatur will attest
Who seconded their boldest efforts best.
By those who have his public service shared:
His higher praise, built on his moral worth,
Need not the testimony of the bard—
That bard who knew his heart, and who might swell
The eulogy of one he loved so well.
In brother, son, companion, neighbour, friend,
These virtues may, on his sepulchral stone,
Be, by the sculptor’s chisel, made to blend:
For these were his, as those survivors know
Whose tears for him in sweet remembrance flow.
O’er the cold ashes of the friends we mourn:
Our best instruction is, to know, the dead
Have surely pass’d the irremeable bourne:—
A simple truth which, to the mind, conveys
More profit than all monumental praise.