(The whole fleet was hard at it now, (Such you see in the Far South, The great black bow comes on, But, as we worked along higher, It was one of your long coal barges (We had often had the like before). 'Twas coming down on us to larboard, Well in with the eastern shore, And our pilot, to let it pass round, (You may guess we never stopped to sound) Giving us a rank sheer to starboard, Ran the Flag hard and fast aground! 'Twas night abreast the Upper Fort, And straightway a rascal Ram (She was shaped like the devil's dam) Puffed away for us with a snort, (It was all of our ship's length, Well, for a little it looked bad; But these things are, somehow, shorter In the acting than the telling. There was no singing-out nor yelling, No stampede, in short; But there we were, my lad, All afire on our port quarter, Flames spouting in at every port, In a twinkling the flames had risen Our topmen, a dauntless crowd, Swarmed in rigging and shroud There ('twas a wonder!) The burning ratlines and strands They quenched with their bare hard hands; At last, by backing and sounding, And under headway once more, The point. If we had it hot before, 'Twas now, from shore to shore, One long, loud thundering roarSuch crashing, splintering, and pounding, And smashing as you never heard before! But that we fought foul wrong to wreck, For all above was battle, But, down in the sick-bay, There was scarce a sob or a moan. And at last, when the dim day broke, Drearily blinking O'er the haze and the cannon-smoke, That ever such morning dulls, There were thirteen traitor hulls On fire and sinking! IN ACTION ANONYMOUS When the blue-black waves are tipped with white, and the balmy trade-winds blow, When the palm-crowned coast in the offing lies, with sands like the driven snow, When the mighty hulls of the battleships-the nation's strength and pride And the ghostlike little torpedo-boats are lying side by side; When all is still save the screaming gulls, as they circle high o'erhead, When naught is heard on the steel-bound decks, save the watches' measured tread, When far to windward a tiny cloud floats up from the grim old fort, Then the piercing scream of a shrapnel-shot and the ten-ton gun's report; Then armored decks are alive with life, and the calls to quarters below, Then the gun crews stand beside their guns, and the stokers sweat below, Then the jingling bells in the engine-room clamor and call for speed, And the thousand tons of hardened steel shake like a Now the guns of the fort are belching flame, and the shot and shell fall fast, Now three are down by the forward gun, and six in the fighting mast, Now the ships rush on in majesty, while the gunners hold their breath, And pray to their God to spare them still from the harbor's hidden death. Now a string of fluttering signal flags from the bridge of the flagship fly, Now the gatlings, rapids, and twelve-inch guns with a crashing peal reply, Now the smoke hangs low o'er the shot-torn wave, dark death lurks in the air, And never a word by the guns is said while they spit and boom and flare. The fleet steams up in battle array, and the broadsides crash and roar, While the rumble and rip from the enemy's guns reply from the smoke-hung shore; The once white decks run red with blood, while the surgeons work below, And fort and fleet, with shot and shell, pay back each blow with blow. At last a flag of truce is raised and gleams through the drifting smoke, And the havoc and wreck of a gun is seen, where a ten-inch shrapnel broke; |