At last the guns of the feet are still, and now from far and near Are heard the shouts of a victor's crew as they answer cheer with chèer. The shrilly call of the bo’s'n's mate the crew from quarters pipes, And the dead are stretched on the quarter-deck, wrapped in the stars and stripes, While the setting sun sinks in the west, a blazing ball of fire, Lighting the scene of a battle fought, and the carnage of man's desire. The increasing moonlight drifts across my bed, 1 A single-rocket pierces the dense night, THE LAST FIGHT BY LEWIS FRANK TOOKER That night I think that no one slept; No bells were struck, no whistle blew, From man to man of all the crew Through roaring seas, we hushed the clock, So when one fool, unheeding, cried Some petty order, straight I ran, All life is but a narrow span: A moment longer here, for all But vain my care; for when the day gray and wet, we saw the foe By noon we saw his black bows throw A little more, we heard the drum, All day our crew had lined the side With grim, set faces, muttering; And once a boy (the first that died) One of our wild songs tried to sing ; A dozen sprang above our rail, Thereon, all hot for war, they bound Their heads with cool, wet bands, and drew Their belts close, and their keen blades ground; Then, at the next gun's puff of blue, And pledged for life or pledged for death Laughing, our brown young singer fell As their next shot crashed through our rail; Then 'twixt us flashed the fire of hell, That shattered spar and riddled sail, What ill we wrought we could not tell; But blood-red all their scuppers dripped When their black hull to starboard dipped. Nine times I saw our helmsman fall, And nine times sent new men, who took The whirling wheel as at death's call; But when I saw the last one look Under the shattered rail to die, I could not send more men to stand And turn in idleness the wheel While others, meeting steel with steel, Cheers on their lips, and in their eyes So to the wheel I went. Like bees I heard the shot go darting by; There came a trembling in my knees, And black spots whirled about the sky. The little town where I was born, A wounded creature drew him where I grasped the wheel, and begged to steer. It mattered not how he might fare The little time he had for fear; He too might serve us yet, he said. I would not fall so like a dog, My helpless back turned to the foe; So when his great hulk, like a log, Came surging past our quarter, lo! Of battle smoke, and luffing wide, The willing waves came rushing in The ragged entrance that we gave; Like snakes I heard their green coils spin Up, up, around our floating grave; Of clashing steel and battle-shout, Around me in a closing ring My grim-faced foemen darkly drew; Then, sweeter than the lark in spring, Loud rang our blades; the red sparks flew. Twice, thrice, I felt the sudden sting Of some keen stroke; then, swinging fair, My own clave more than empty air. The fight went raging past me when My good blade cleared a silent place; Then in a ring of fallen men I paused to breathe a little space. Elsewhere the deck roared like a glen When mountain torrents meet; the fray A moment then seemed far away. The barren sea swept to the sky; The empty sky dipped to the sea; Such utter waste could scarcely lie Beyond death's starved periphery. Far overhead an ominous bird |