Poems (Waldenburg)/The Cumberland

THE CUMBERLAND.
Chaunt ye waves in monotone,Ye the mighty, ye the hoary!Sound the requiem one by one,Surging upward tell the story,Story saddest and most grand,Of the Cumberland.
Once she rode you proudly,Feared, gazed on with wonder,Held her own right loudlyWith her deep-mouthed thunder,Mannéd by the bravest bandWas the Cumberland!
Beat the pondrous shot and shellOn her iron armor,Those stout sides they bore it well,Dulled the power to harm her,With iron heart and iron hand,Stood the Cumberland!
Rent and bleeding! must defeatCover all her daring?Grandly scarred in her defeatMust she yield despairing?"Never"! cry that bravest bandOf the Cumberland!
"If retreat then deaths I cry,"Spake the voice commanding,"Comrades, better thus to die,Than our vessel brandingWith this shame—'these are the bandOf conquered Cumberland!'"
"If retreat then death we crave,And we'll meet it in the deep"—Answered they. The silent waveCovered them to sleep,Mournfully did take the bandOf the Cumberland!
Patriots sleep! thy De ProfundisLand and sea shall murmur ever,Rampant flags shall honor thisDying brave endeavor.Thus we leave them, bravest bandOf the Cumberland!