Page 24
The Sudbury Fight
(April 21, 1676)
To GEORGIANA RICE
To GEORGIANA RICE
Ye sons of Massachusetts, all who love that honored name, Ye children of New England, holding dear your fathers' fame, Hear tell of Sudbury's battle through a day of death and flame!
The painted Wampanoags, PHILIP's hateful warriors, creep Upon the town at springtide while the skies deny us rain; We see their shadows lurking in the forest's whispering deep, And speed the sorry tidings past dry field and rustling lane: Come hastily or never when the wild beast lusts for gore, And send your best and bravest if you wish to see us more!
The Commonwealth is quiet now, and peace her measure fills, Content in homes and farmsteads, busy marts and buzzing mills From the Atlantic's roaring to the tranquil Berkshire hills.
But through that day our fathers, speaking low their breathless words, Their wives and babes in safety, toil to save their little all; They fetch their slender food-stores, drive indoors their scanty herds, They clean the bell-mouthed musket, melt the lead and mould the ball; Please GOD they'll keep their battle till their countrymen shall hasteWith succor from the eastward, iron-hearted, flinty-faced.