Classic and Contemporary Poetry
ON THE DEATH OF CAPTAIN NICHOLAS BIDDLE, by PHILIP FRENEAU Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: What distant thunders rend the skies Last Line: And lost what honor won. Subject(s): American Revolution; Biddle, Nicholas (1786-1844); Navy - United States; American Navy | ||||||||
WHAT distant thunders rend the skies, What clouds of smoke in volumes rise, What means this dreadful roar! Is from his base Vesuvius thrown, Is sky-topt Atlas tumbled down, Or Etna's self no more! Shock after shock torments my ear; And lo! two hostile ships appear, Red lightnings round them glow: The Yarmouth boasts of sixty-four, The Randolph thirty-two -- no more -- And will she fight this foe! The Randolph soon on Stygian streams Shall coast along the land of dreams, The islands of the dead! But fate, that parts them on the deep, Shall save the Briton, still to weep His ancient honors fled. Say, who commands that dismal blaze, Where yonder starry streamer plays; Does Mars with Jove engage! 'T is Biddle wings those angry fires, Biddle, whose bosom Jove inspires With more than mortal rage. Tremendous flash! and hark, the ball Drives through old Yarmouth, flames and all; Her bravest sons expire; Did Mars himself approach so nigh, Even Mars, without disgrace, might fly The Randolph's fiercer fire. The Briton views his mangled crew, "And shall we strike to thirty-two" (Said Hector, stained with gore); "Shall Britain's flag to these descend -- Rise, and the glorious conflict end, Britons, I ask no more!" He spoke -- they charged their cannon round, Again the vaulted heavens resound, The Randolph bore it all, Then fixed her pointed cannons true -- Away the unwieldy vengeance flew; Britain, the warriors fall. The Yarmouth saw, with dire dismay, Her wounded hull, shrouds shot away, Her boldest heroes dead -- She saw amidst her floating slain The conquering Randolph stem the main -- She saw, she turned, and fled! That hour, blest chief, had she been thine, Dear Biddle, had the powers divine Been kind as thou wert brave; But fate, who doomed thee to expire, prepared an arrow tipped with fire, And marked a watery grave, And in that hour when conquest came Winged at his ship a pointed flame That not even he could shun -- The conquest ceased, the Yarmouth fled, The bursting Randolph ruin spread, And lost what honor won. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...READING MY POEMS FROM WORLD WAR II by WILLIAM MEREDITH WHEN THE GREAT GRAY SHIPS COME IN [AUGUST 20, 1898] by GUY WETMORE CARRYL TOM BOWLING ['S EPITAPH] by CHARLES DIBDIN HOW WE BURNED THE 'PHILADELPHIA' by BARRETT EASTMAN BARNEY'S INVITATION by PHILIP FRENEAU ON THE MEMORABLE VICTORY OF PAUL JONES by PHILIP FRENEAU THE YANKEE PRIVATEER by ARTHUR HALE OLD IRONSIDES by OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES THE BATTLE OF THE KEGS by FRANCIS HOPKINSON AN ANCIENT PROPHECY by PHILIP FRENEAU |
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