William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
Fort Griswold, Sept. 6, 1781John Gardiner Calkins Brainard (17951828)
W
Why on this rough and rocky land,
With sly and muffled oar,
Why in this red and bright array,
Stealing along the fisher’s bay,
Pull ye your boats to shore?
Sequester’d, that the sea has found
In its adventurous roam;
A halcyon surface, pure and deep,
And placid as an infant’s sleep
Cradled and rock’d at home.
That strange, rough whisper in his ear,
It is a murderer’s breath;
A thousand bayonets are bright
Beneath the blessed morning’s light,
Moving to blood and death.
To this lone Sound; its coming swell
May moan when none can save;
Many shall go, and few return;
That rock shall be your only urn,
That sand your only grave.
With steady stroke, is seen to glide
A little venturous boat:
’Twas like the cloud Elijah saw,
Small as his hand, yet soon to draw
Its quiver’d lightnings out.
A heart to spend and to be spent
Till the last drop was shed;
’Twas like that cloud; it had a hand
That, o’er its loved, its native land,
A shadow broad has spread.
To fight, to conquer, and to save,
Or fearlessly to die;
Well didst thou hold that feeling true,—
Didst well that purpose bold pursue,
Till death closed down thine eye.
That bloody tale of butchering times;
’Tis too well known to all;
I write not of the foeman’s path,
I write not of the battle’s wrath,
But of the hero’s fall.
Near Groton heights, and nibbling sheep
Their grassy graves have found;
But some, they are a few, are laid
Beneath a little swarded glade
On Fisher’s Island Sound.
It saw that arm’d array of men;
And one old fisher there
Gave me this tale; ’twas he who told
The rough, the headlong, and the bold,
How their rash fight should fare.
Who stood or fell, who fought or fled
On that September day.
Old man! thy bones are gently laid
Close by yon shatter’d oak tree’s shade,
Beside the fisher’s bay.