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Home  »  The Book of Georgian Verse  »  Richard Glover (1712–1785)

William Stanley Braithwaite, ed. The Book of Georgian Verse. 1909.

Ballad of Admiral Hosier’s Ghost

Richard Glover (1712–1785)

AS near Porto-Bello lying

On the gently swelling flood,

At midnight with streamers flying

Our triumphant navy rode;

There while Vernon sate all-glorious

From the Spaniards’ late defeat:

And his crews, with shouts victorious,

Drank success to England’s fleet.

On a sudden shrilly sounding,

Hideous yells and shrieks were heard;

Then each heart with fear confounding,

A sad troop of ghosts appear’d.

All in dreary hammocks shrouded,

Which for winding-sheets they wore,

And with looks by sorrow clouded

Frowning on that hostile shore.

On them gleam’d the moon’s wan lustre,

When the shade of Hosier brave

His pale bands was seen to muster

Rising from their watery grave.

O’er the glimmering wave he hied him,

Where the Burford rear’d her sail,

With three thousand ghosts beside him,

And in groans did Vernon hail.

Heed, oh heed our fatal story,

I am Hosier’s injur’d ghost,

You who now have purchas’d glory

At this place where I was lost!

Tho’ in Porto-Bello’s ruin

You now triumph free from fears,

When you think on our undoing,

You will mix your joy with tears.

See these mournful spectres sweeping

Ghastly o’er this hated wave,

Whose wan cheeks are stain’d with weeping;

These were English captains brave.

Mark those numbers pale and horrid,

Those were once my sailors bold:

Lo, each hangs his drooping forehead,

While his dismal tale is told.

I, by twenty sail attended,

Did this Spanish town affright:

Nothing then its wealth defended

But my orders not to fight.

Oh! that in this rolling ocean

I had cast them with disdain,

And obey’d my heart’s warm motion

To have quell’d the pride of Spain!

For resistance I could fear none,

But with twenty ships had done

What thou, brave and happy Vernon,

Hast achiev’d with six alone.

Then the bastimentos never

Had our foul dishonour seen,

Nor the sea the sad receiver

Of this gallant train had been.

Thus, like thee, proud Spain dismaying,

And her galleons leading home,

Though condemn’d for disobeying,

I had met a traitor’s doom,

To have fallen, my country crying

He has play’d an English part,

Had been better far than dying

Of a griev’d and broken heart.

Unrepining at thy glory,

Thy successful arms we hail;

But remember our sad story,

And let Hosier’s wrongs prevail.

Sent in this foul clime to languish,

Think what thousands fell in vain,

Wasted with disease and anguish,

Not in glorious battle slain.

Hence with all my train attending

From their oozy tombs below,

Thro’ the hoary foam ascending,

Here I feed my constant woe:

Here the bastimentos viewing,

We recall our shameful doom,

And our plaintive cries renewing,

Wander thro’ the midnight gloom.

O’er these waves for ever mourning

Shall we roam depriv’d of rest,

If to Britain’s shores returning

You neglect my just request;

After this proud foe subduing,

When your patriot friends you see,

Think on vengeance for my ruin,

And for England sham’d in me.