Free-Song on the Potomac
Ho, Crape and Tinsel! will ye stop
The swelling tide of Freedom’s song,
Even while the Judgement Hour lets drop
God’s lightning on the towers of wrong!—
Forbid the fearless free who fling
Their lives on battle’s combing wave
To hear their Mountain Warblers sing
Our ransom with the ransomed slave?
But Truth divine can pass your line
Without your word and countersign;
The winds will wing it,
The birds will sing it,
The seas will ring it,
The shouting brooks from the hills will bring it
And your shattering cannon-peal shall fling it
Whatever a slave may pine!
Sweet songsters of the Graine Hills,
Birds of the rocks and forest oak,
Wild-bubbling as their own free rills
Their music, through the cannon-smoke,
Rained like the skylark’s from her cloud;
And might have laid the fiend of Saul,
But makes your haunting fiend more loud!
Whose javelin seeks the life of all.
Unjustly strong, from out your throng!
Ye drive the Flock, but not the Song!
The wind will wing it,
The birds will sing it,
The seas will ring it,
The shouting brooks from the hills will bring it,
And the scream of your roaring shells will fling it
Wherever the weak bears wrong.
Not clanging horns nor rumbling drums
The tones that deepest thrill the land;
The Resurrection Angel comes
With Freedom’s trumpet in her hand!
Its blast will call the living dead,
Redeemed, from slavery’s Hadean tomb,
To find our welcome; — or instead
Peal the last charge of flying Doom!
The hour of Fate will never wait,
Ye hear its judgement knell too late.
The winds will wing it,
The birds will sing it,
The seas will ring it,
The shouting brooks from the hills will bring it,
And a nation’s dying groan shall fling it
Through the shattered prison-gate!
Once old chivalric honor reigned,
And Bards were sacred, e’on to foes;
They kept the glory heroes gained,
And sang high deeds that shamed repose.
But cheer, my Warblers! fly away
To sing more clear in smokeless air;
The herald Angels sing to-day,
Nor ask a tinseled tyrant where.
From heaven’s blue cope the song of hope
Thrills down the bondman’s dungeon slope;
The wings will wing it,
The birds will sing it,
The seas will ring it,
The shouting brooks from the hills will bring it,
And a rescued nation’s voice shall fling it.
Where the last lone slave may grope.
- Title
- Free-Song on the Potomac
- Alternative Title
- Ho Crape and Tinsel! Will ye stop
- Date
- 1862
- Bibliographic Citation
- New York Independent
- referenced and reprinted in John Wallace Hutchinson, Story of the Hutchinsons (Tribe of Jesse). Ed. Charles E. Mann. Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1896. Volume 1, p. 405-407.
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Large Scrapbook 226, George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Small Scrapbook 102
- Subject
-
Abolition
Civil War
Hutchinson Family Singers -
Abolition
-
Hutchinson Family Singers
-
Civil War Union Recruitment Poster
- comment
-
Hutchinson Family Singers
Part of Free-Song on the Potomac
