She reached our range. Our broadside rang, Our heavy pivots roared; Against her sides we poured. God's mercy! from her sloping roof Or when against her dusky hull On, on, with fast increasing speed, She heeded not, no gun she fired, Alas! our beautiful, keen bow, Alas! alas! my Cumberland, Once more she backward drew a space, ON BOARD THE CUMBERLAND. Then, in the wantonness of hate, The dead and dying round us lay, We felt our vessel settling fast, We knew our time was brief; 87 "The pumps, the pumps!" But they who pumped, And fought not, wept with grief. "Oh, keep us but an hour afloat! To be the instruments of Heaven From captain down to powder-boy, Two soldiers, but by chance aboard, And when a gun's crew lost a hand, Our forward magazine was drowned; Yes, cheering, calling us by name, With decks afloat, and powder gone, So sponges, rammers, and handspikes We placed within their proper racks, "Up to the spar-deck! save yourselves!" We turned - we did not like to go; Some swore, some groaned with pain. We reached the deck. There Randall stood: "Another turn, men - so!" Calmly he aimed his pivot-gun : "Now, Tenny, let her go!" It did our sore hearts good to hear Brave Randall leaped upon the gun, It was our last, our deadliest shot; ON BOARD THE CUMBERLAND. The poor ship staggered, lurched to port, Down, down, as headlong through the waves Then I remember little more; I tried to cheer. I cannot say A blue mist closed around my eyes, When I awoke, a soldier-lad, All dripping from the sea, With two great tears upon his cheeks, I tried to speak. He understood The wish I could not speak. He turned me. There, thank God! the flag And there, while thread shall hang to thread, Oh, let that ensign fly! The noblest constellation set Against our northern sky. A sign that we who live may claim For those beneath the wave! 89 MARCHING ALONG.* BY WILLIAM B. BRADBURY. THE army is gathering from near and from far; CHORUS. Marching along, we are marching along, The foe is before us in battle array, But let us not waver, or turn from the way; Our wives and our children we leave in your care ; We sigh for our country, we mourn for our dead; * Few songs were more truly popular all through the war than this, which is here printed from a street broadside. It was sung in the streets and at the public schools, and by all sorts and conditions of men. The name McClellan, in the first stanza, was successively replaced by Hooker, Meade, and Grant, with "for," prefixed when necessary to eke out the measure. A vigorous and spirited melody, with a well-marked rhythm, which was particularly good in the chorus, contributed much to the universal favor in which this song was held. |