THE FRIGATE-GHOST

THE FRIGATE-GHOST

Yes, you may build her againAs she was when she sailed the sea;She may bear the brave old name,And the harbors hail her the same;’Tis her semblance, it is not she!She is gone from our mortal ken.I know not how or when,But her spirit escaped awayFrom the dock and the dull decay,From the uses of unprized ageAnd the changes wrought of men;Like a wild sea-bird from a cage,Her soul took flight from the formTo the tides that none can tame,To the restless fields of her fame,To the wet salt wind and the storm!Somewhere she ranges free,Stately, a shape of light,Revisiting leagues of seaIllumined with glorious fight.She hangs like a lucent cloudOn the coast where her guns spoke loud,In the gates of the Moslem proud,Till the Crescent grew faint with fright.Exultant she bounds on the brine,Tracing the course of the raceWhen the Æolus held her in chase,And the Belvidere and the Shannon,And the Africa, ship-o’-the-line,With another, doomed to her cannon,To be blazoned in flame at the last,When the grim sea-duel was done:God rest the souls that passedEre the Guerrière’s leeward gun!Ere the noblest flag on the seaCame down to the Stripes and Stars!Oh, the frigate-ghost, as she ranges free,Thrills yet through her spectral spars!Aye, the old pride stirs her stillAs she sails and sails at will;In her cross-trees memories nestle,Though she walks the wave a ghost.Well she minds the wary wrestleWhen her shot poured hot as lavaOn the shattered, stubborn Java,Off the dim Brazilian coast;And she haunts the moonlit seasWhere her crashing broadsides brokeThrough the drift of silvered smokeWhile she waged a double battleIn the waters Portuguese.Still the ghostly muskets rattle,And the old drums beat, beat, beat,Like a heart that will not die;And the old fife whistles high,And the powder-scent is rank,And she feels on her hollow plankThe old, dead heroes’ feet!Ah, never sailor-manHas seen her where she ranges,Escaped from time and changesAs only spirits can,Clear, absolute, and free!Yet, some stern hour to be,When a fight is fought at sea,And the right of the fight is ours,And the cause of the right is failing,There shall rise a frigate sailing,A luminous presence palingThrough the powder-cloud where it lowers;Pale smoke from her side shall break,Pale faces over her railingShall frown, till the foemen shakeWith fear and bewildered passion,Marking her old-time fashion,In the turrets of hostile powers;And then shall the rumor runLike a lightning from lip to lip,And shall leap from ship to ship,While the wounded gunner reelsAgain to his reeking gun,Touched with a magic that heals,Feeling this vision remind himThat the strong Dead fight behind him:“’Tis the ghost ofIronsides,Come back from the tameless tides,From the ocean-fields unbounded,Complete with her scattered spars,Manned with the shades of her tars,With the smoke of her guns surrounded,To succor the Stripes and Stars!”

Yes, you may build her againAs she was when she sailed the sea;She may bear the brave old name,And the harbors hail her the same;’Tis her semblance, it is not she!She is gone from our mortal ken.I know not how or when,But her spirit escaped awayFrom the dock and the dull decay,From the uses of unprized ageAnd the changes wrought of men;Like a wild sea-bird from a cage,Her soul took flight from the formTo the tides that none can tame,To the restless fields of her fame,To the wet salt wind and the storm!Somewhere she ranges free,Stately, a shape of light,Revisiting leagues of seaIllumined with glorious fight.She hangs like a lucent cloudOn the coast where her guns spoke loud,In the gates of the Moslem proud,Till the Crescent grew faint with fright.Exultant she bounds on the brine,Tracing the course of the raceWhen the Æolus held her in chase,And the Belvidere and the Shannon,And the Africa, ship-o’-the-line,With another, doomed to her cannon,To be blazoned in flame at the last,When the grim sea-duel was done:God rest the souls that passedEre the Guerrière’s leeward gun!Ere the noblest flag on the seaCame down to the Stripes and Stars!Oh, the frigate-ghost, as she ranges free,Thrills yet through her spectral spars!Aye, the old pride stirs her stillAs she sails and sails at will;In her cross-trees memories nestle,Though she walks the wave a ghost.Well she minds the wary wrestleWhen her shot poured hot as lavaOn the shattered, stubborn Java,Off the dim Brazilian coast;And she haunts the moonlit seasWhere her crashing broadsides brokeThrough the drift of silvered smokeWhile she waged a double battleIn the waters Portuguese.Still the ghostly muskets rattle,And the old drums beat, beat, beat,Like a heart that will not die;And the old fife whistles high,And the powder-scent is rank,And she feels on her hollow plankThe old, dead heroes’ feet!Ah, never sailor-manHas seen her where she ranges,Escaped from time and changesAs only spirits can,Clear, absolute, and free!Yet, some stern hour to be,When a fight is fought at sea,And the right of the fight is ours,And the cause of the right is failing,There shall rise a frigate sailing,A luminous presence palingThrough the powder-cloud where it lowers;Pale smoke from her side shall break,Pale faces over her railingShall frown, till the foemen shakeWith fear and bewildered passion,Marking her old-time fashion,In the turrets of hostile powers;And then shall the rumor runLike a lightning from lip to lip,And shall leap from ship to ship,While the wounded gunner reelsAgain to his reeking gun,Touched with a magic that heals,Feeling this vision remind himThat the strong Dead fight behind him:“’Tis the ghost ofIronsides,Come back from the tameless tides,From the ocean-fields unbounded,Complete with her scattered spars,Manned with the shades of her tars,With the smoke of her guns surrounded,To succor the Stripes and Stars!”

Yes, you may build her againAs she was when she sailed the sea;She may bear the brave old name,And the harbors hail her the same;’Tis her semblance, it is not she!She is gone from our mortal ken.

Yes, you may build her again

As she was when she sailed the sea;

She may bear the brave old name,

And the harbors hail her the same;

’Tis her semblance, it is not she!

She is gone from our mortal ken.

I know not how or when,But her spirit escaped awayFrom the dock and the dull decay,From the uses of unprized ageAnd the changes wrought of men;Like a wild sea-bird from a cage,Her soul took flight from the formTo the tides that none can tame,To the restless fields of her fame,To the wet salt wind and the storm!

I know not how or when,

But her spirit escaped away

From the dock and the dull decay,

From the uses of unprized age

And the changes wrought of men;

Like a wild sea-bird from a cage,

Her soul took flight from the form

To the tides that none can tame,

To the restless fields of her fame,

To the wet salt wind and the storm!

Somewhere she ranges free,Stately, a shape of light,Revisiting leagues of seaIllumined with glorious fight.She hangs like a lucent cloudOn the coast where her guns spoke loud,In the gates of the Moslem proud,Till the Crescent grew faint with fright.Exultant she bounds on the brine,Tracing the course of the raceWhen the Æolus held her in chase,And the Belvidere and the Shannon,And the Africa, ship-o’-the-line,With another, doomed to her cannon,To be blazoned in flame at the last,When the grim sea-duel was done:God rest the souls that passedEre the Guerrière’s leeward gun!Ere the noblest flag on the seaCame down to the Stripes and Stars!Oh, the frigate-ghost, as she ranges free,Thrills yet through her spectral spars!

Somewhere she ranges free,

Stately, a shape of light,

Revisiting leagues of sea

Illumined with glorious fight.

She hangs like a lucent cloud

On the coast where her guns spoke loud,

In the gates of the Moslem proud,

Till the Crescent grew faint with fright.

Exultant she bounds on the brine,

Tracing the course of the race

When the Æolus held her in chase,

And the Belvidere and the Shannon,

And the Africa, ship-o’-the-line,

With another, doomed to her cannon,

To be blazoned in flame at the last,

When the grim sea-duel was done:

God rest the souls that passed

Ere the Guerrière’s leeward gun!

Ere the noblest flag on the sea

Came down to the Stripes and Stars!

Oh, the frigate-ghost, as she ranges free,

Thrills yet through her spectral spars!

Aye, the old pride stirs her stillAs she sails and sails at will;In her cross-trees memories nestle,Though she walks the wave a ghost.Well she minds the wary wrestleWhen her shot poured hot as lavaOn the shattered, stubborn Java,Off the dim Brazilian coast;And she haunts the moonlit seasWhere her crashing broadsides brokeThrough the drift of silvered smokeWhile she waged a double battleIn the waters Portuguese.Still the ghostly muskets rattle,And the old drums beat, beat, beat,Like a heart that will not die;And the old fife whistles high,And the powder-scent is rank,And she feels on her hollow plankThe old, dead heroes’ feet!

Aye, the old pride stirs her still

As she sails and sails at will;

In her cross-trees memories nestle,

Though she walks the wave a ghost.

Well she minds the wary wrestle

When her shot poured hot as lava

On the shattered, stubborn Java,

Off the dim Brazilian coast;

And she haunts the moonlit seas

Where her crashing broadsides broke

Through the drift of silvered smoke

While she waged a double battle

In the waters Portuguese.

Still the ghostly muskets rattle,

And the old drums beat, beat, beat,

Like a heart that will not die;

And the old fife whistles high,

And the powder-scent is rank,

And she feels on her hollow plank

The old, dead heroes’ feet!

Ah, never sailor-manHas seen her where she ranges,Escaped from time and changesAs only spirits can,Clear, absolute, and free!Yet, some stern hour to be,When a fight is fought at sea,And the right of the fight is ours,And the cause of the right is failing,There shall rise a frigate sailing,A luminous presence palingThrough the powder-cloud where it lowers;Pale smoke from her side shall break,Pale faces over her railingShall frown, till the foemen shakeWith fear and bewildered passion,Marking her old-time fashion,In the turrets of hostile powers;And then shall the rumor runLike a lightning from lip to lip,And shall leap from ship to ship,While the wounded gunner reelsAgain to his reeking gun,Touched with a magic that heals,Feeling this vision remind himThat the strong Dead fight behind him:“’Tis the ghost ofIronsides,Come back from the tameless tides,From the ocean-fields unbounded,Complete with her scattered spars,Manned with the shades of her tars,With the smoke of her guns surrounded,To succor the Stripes and Stars!”

Ah, never sailor-man

Has seen her where she ranges,

Escaped from time and changes

As only spirits can,

Clear, absolute, and free!

Yet, some stern hour to be,

When a fight is fought at sea,

And the right of the fight is ours,

And the cause of the right is failing,

There shall rise a frigate sailing,

A luminous presence paling

Through the powder-cloud where it lowers;

Pale smoke from her side shall break,

Pale faces over her railing

Shall frown, till the foemen shake

With fear and bewildered passion,

Marking her old-time fashion,

In the turrets of hostile powers;

And then shall the rumor run

Like a lightning from lip to lip,

And shall leap from ship to ship,

While the wounded gunner reels

Again to his reeking gun,

Touched with a magic that heals,

Feeling this vision remind him

That the strong Dead fight behind him:

“’Tis the ghost ofIronsides,

Come back from the tameless tides,

From the ocean-fields unbounded,

Complete with her scattered spars,

Manned with the shades of her tars,

With the smoke of her guns surrounded,

To succor the Stripes and Stars!”


Back to IndexNext