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    The Battle for the Mississipppi

    by Herman Melville
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    Page 1 of 1
    (April, 1862.)

    When Israel camped by Migdol hoar,
    Down at her feet her shawm she threw,
    But Moses sung and timbrels rung
    For Pharaoh's standed crew.
    So God appears in apt events--
    The Lord is a man of war!
    So the strong wind to the muse is given
    In victory's roar.

    Deep be the ode that hymns the fleet--
    The fight by night--the fray
    Which bore our Flag against the powerful stream,
    And led it up to day.
    Dully through din of larger strife
    Shall bay that warring gun;
    But none the less to us who live
    It peals--an echoing one.

    The shock of ships, the jar of walls,
    The rush through thick and thin--
    The flaring fire-rafts, glare and gloom--
    Eddies, and shells that spin--
    The boom-chain burst, the hulks dislodged,
    The jam of gun-boats driven,
    Or fired, or sunk--made up a war
    Like Michael's waged with leven.

    The manned Varuna stemmed and quelled
    The odds which hard beset;
    The oaken flag-ship, half ablaze,
    Passed on and thundered yet;
    While foundering, gloomed in grimy flame,
    The Ram Manassas--hark the yell!--
    Plunged, and was gone; in joy or fright,
    The River gave a startled swell.

    They fought through lurid dark till dawn;
    The war-smoke rolled away
    With clouds of night, and showed the fleet
    In scarred yet firm array,
    Above the forts, above the drift
    Of wrecks which strife had made;
    And Farragut sailed up to the town
    And anchored--sheathed the blade.

    The moody broadsides, brooding deep,
    Hold the lewd mob at bay,
    While o'er the armed decks' solemn aisles
    The meek church-pennons play;
    By shotted guns the sailors stand,
    With foreheads bound or bare;
    The captains and the conquering crews
    Humble their pride in prayer.

    They pray; and after victory, prayer
    Is meet for men who mourn their slain;
    The living shall unmoor and sail,
    But Death's dark anchor secret deeps detain.
    Yet glory slants her shaft of rays
    Far through the undisturbed abyss;
    There must be other, nobler worlds for them
    Who nobly yield their lives in this.
    Page 1 of 1
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