THE NEW REVEILLE. 243 COME THE NEW REVEILLE. BY WILLIAM O. BOURNE. ME from the North, O freeman! Now or never! Clothed in the panoply of right and power; The foe is striving with a bold endeavor To win the triumph in the noontide hour; Come with the earnest of the blazing future! Come with the burdens of the storied past! Come with exultings in the mighty present, And on the altar all your tribute cast. Come from the pine-clad hills and furthest river, With sacred vows and giant will deliver From treason's tread the land of WASHINGTON. Come from the hills where fountains pure and gushing Flow with the emblem of a better life; Or, like the cataract in thunders rushing, Press on and conquer in the holy strife. Come from the loom where artist-hands are weaving The stronger web in Time's great loom is leaving 244 THE NEW REVEILLE. With living threads that beat with love's pulsations, Come from the fields, O brave and sturdy yeoman Come from the hearthstones where ye love to sing! Now is the hour to meet the bloody foeman, Come from the Keystone in the arch of Union! Bring from the dark mines the treasures lying deep! The fires grow hotter in the nation's furnace, With fiercer blasts that will not let us sleep; With stalwart arms our heroes now are moulding Pillars of iron for our temple dome, Which now we forge, while other lands, beholding, Hear the great anvil ring in Freedom's home. Come from the mountain, lake, and fertile prairie, Blooming in verdure where the freemen toil; TO CANAAN! 245 Strike for the waters that shall onward carry Forth to the world the riches of your soil; Strike for the freedom of the mighty river! Strike for the glory of your Western land! Strike, freemen! till victorious blows shall shiver All the base foes that in your pathway stand. Come from the South, O well-tried sons of sorrow! TO CANAÄN! A SONG OF THE SIX HUNDRED THOUSAND.* WH HERE are you going, soldiers, See Numbers i. 45, 46. 246 TO CANAÄN! What Captain leads your armies His name is Lord of Hosts! To Canaän, to Canaän The Lord has led us forth, To blow before the heathen walls What flag is this you carry Along the sea and shore? The same our grandsires lifted up, — The same our father's bore! It shed the crimson rain, What God has woven in His loom To Canaan, to Canaän The Lord has led us forth, To plant upon the rebel towers What troop is this that follows, All armed with picks and spades? The iron-skin brigades! They'll pile up Freedom's breast work, TO CANAÄN! They'll scoop out rebels' graves; And march them off for slaves? The Lord has led us forth, To strike upon the captive's chain What song is this you 're singing? To Canaän! To Canaän! The priests and maidens cried; To Canaan, to Canaän The Lord has led us forth, 247 To thunder through its adder dens When Canaän's hosts are scattered, What follows next in order? The Lord will see to that! We'll break the tyrant's sceptre, We'll build the people's throne, |