The Charge of the Second Iowa Cavalry
An Epic Poem by Ellis Parker Butler
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Comrades, many a
year and day |
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Behind lay the swamp, a dank
morass. A marsh - no horse nor man could pass Save by one road, one narrow way. But beyond that road our safety lay, In front rose the hills which the rebels held With his howling cannon that raked and shelled Our troops. We lay in the centre. |
Twenty-four
cannon thundered and roared! |
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| "Gallop! Charge!" On
the rebels ears Ring the thundering Yankee cheers! And on, like a wave of maddened sea, On - Dash the Iowa cavalry! Into the torrents of shot and shell That shrieks and screams like the fiends of hell! Into the torrent of shot that kills! Into the torrent of shell that stills The cheer on many a lip, we ride Like the onward rush of a whirling tide Up to the cannons mouth, Our cheers Curdle the blood of the cannoneers To right and left from his silenced guns In wild retreat the rebel runs. And the charge of the Iowa cavalry Rushes on! |
Can
you stop the sea We had conquered defeat! |
| Comrades, many a year and day Have fled since that glorious 9th of May When we made the charge at Farmington. And our time on earth is almost run, But when we are gone our children will tell How we rode through rebel shots and shell. How we rode on the guns with a mighty shout, And saved Paines army from utter route. And carved in the temple of glory will be The roll of the 2nd Iowa Cavalry. The brave old 2nd,
that never knew |
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