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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I
>
Poets of the Civil War I
> The
Cumberland
and
Merrimac;
The Capture of New Orleans
The War in the West; Willson
Emancipation
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVI. Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I.
II.
Poets of the Civil War I
.
§ 9. The
Cumberland
and
Merrimac;
The Capture of New Orleans.
This same year on the sea the duel between the
Merrimac
and the
Cumberland
stirred the poets as did almost no other episode of the entire war. Thomas Buchanan Read wrote
The Attack;
Longfellow,
The Cumberland;
Boker,
On Board the Cumberland;
Melville,
The Cumberland;
Weir Mitchell,
How the Cumberland Went Down,
all of them poems which, with a larger eloquence than then appeared, sounded the knell of the wooden battleship. As might have been expected, defeat had more poets than victory; Boker, however, wrote
The Cruise of the Monitor,
and Lucy Larcom
The Sinking of the Merrimac.
For the capture of New Orleans there were Bokers
The Ballad of New Orleans
and
The Varuna
(the name of a Federal ship sunk during the action), while Brownells
The River Fight
was as triumphant as the attack.
Do you know of the dreary land,
If land such region may seem,
Where tis neither sea nor strand,
Ocean nor good dry land,
But the nightmare marsh of a dream
Where the Mighty River his death-road takes,
Mid pools, and windings that coil like snakes,
(A hundred leagues of bayous and lakes,)
To die in the great Gulf Stream?
Would you hear of the River-Fight?
It was two, of a soft spring night
Gods stars looked down on all,
And all was clear and bright
But the low fogs clinging breath
Up the River of Death
Sailed the Great Admiral.
On our high poop-deck he stood,
And round him ranged the men
Who have made their birthright good
Of manhood, once and agen
Lords of helm and of sail,
Tried in tempest and gale,
Bronzed in battle and wreck
Bell and Bailey grandly led
Each his Line of the Blue and Red
Wainwright stood by our starboard rail;
Thornton fought the deck.
And I mind me of more than they,
Of the youthful, steadfast ones,
That have shown them worthy sons
Of the Seamen passed away
(Tyson conned our helm, that day,
Watson stood by his guns.)
Lord of mercy and frown,
Ruling oer sea and shore,
Send us such scene once more!
All in Line of Battle
Where the black ships bear down
On tyrant fort and town,
Mid cannon cloud and rattle
And the great guns once more
Thunder back the roar
Of the traitor walls ashore,
And the traitor flags come down!
10
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The War in the West; Willson
Emancipation
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