Fontenoy
I.
Thrice, at the
huts of
Fontenoy, the English column failed,
And twice the
lines of Saint
Antoine the Dutch in vain assailed;
For town and
slope were
filled with fort and flanking battery,
And well they
swept the
English ranks and Dutch auxiliary.
As vainly,
through De
Barri's wood, the British soldiers burst,
The French
artillery drove
them back, diminished, and dispersed.
The bloody Duke
of
Cumberland beheld with anxious eye,
And ordered up
his last
reserve, his latest chance to try,
On Fontenoy, on
Fontenoy,
how fast his generals ride!
And mustering
come his
chosen troops, like clouds at eventide.
II.
Six thousand
English
veterans in stately column tread;
Their cannon
blaze in front
and flank, Lord Hay is at their head;
Steady they step
a-down the
slope--steady they climb the hill;
Steady they
load--steady
they fire, moving right onward still,
Betwixt the wood
and
Fontenoy, as through a furnace blast,
Through rampart,
trench, and
palisade, and bullets showering fast;
And on the open
plain above
they rose and kept their course,
With ready fire
and grim
resolve, that mocked at hostile force:
Past Fontenoy,
past
Fontenoy, while thinner grew their ranks--
They break, as
broke the
Zuyder Zee through Holland's ocean banks.
III.
More idly than
the summer
flies, French tirailleurs rush round;
As stubble to the
lava tide,
French squadrons strew the ground;
Bomb-shell and
grape and
round-shot tore, still on they marched
and fired--
Fast from each
volley
grenadier and voltigeur retired.
"Push on, my
household
cavalry!" King Louis madly cried:
To death they
rush, but rude
their shock--not unavenged they died.
On through the
camp the
column trod--King Louis turns his rein:
"Not yet, my
liege," Saxe interposed, "the Irish troops remain."
And Fontenoy,
famed
Fontenoy, had been a Waterloo
Were not these
exiles ready
then, fresh, vehement, and true.
IV.
"Lord Clare," he
says, "you have your wish; there are your Saxon foes!"
The Marshal
almost smiles to
see, so furiously he goes!
How fierce the
look these
exiles wear, who're wont to be so gay,
The treasured
wrongs of
fifty years are in their hearts to-day--
The treaty
broken, ere the
ink wherewith 'twas writ could dry,
Their plundered
homes, their
ruined shrines, their women's parting cry,
Their priesthood
hunted down
like wolves, their country overthrown--
Each looks as if
revenge for
all were staked on him alone
On Fontenoy, on
Fontenoy,
nor ever yet elsewhere,
Rushed on to
fight a nobler
band than these proud exiles were.
V.
O'Brien's voice
is hoarse
with joy, as, halting, he commands
"Fix
bay'nets!--charge!" Like mountain storm, rush on these fiery bands!
Thin is the
English column
now, and faint their volleys grow,
Yet, must'ring
all the
strength they have, they make a gallant show.
They dress their
ranks upon
the hill to face that battle-wind--
Their bayonets
the breakers'
foam; like rocks, the men behind!
One volley
crashes from
their line, when, through the surging smoke,
With empty guns
clutched in
their hands, the headlong Irish broke.
On Fontenoy, on
Fontenoy,
hark to that fierce huzza!
"Revenge,
remember Limerick! dash down the
Sacsanach!"
VI.
Like lions
leaping at a fold
when mad with hunger's pang,
Right up against
the English
line the Irish exiles sprang:
Bright was their
steel, 'tis
bloody now, their guns are filled with
gore;
Through shattered
ranks and
severed files the trampled flags they
tore;
The English
strove with
desperate strength, paused, rallied, staggered,
fled--
The green
hill-side is
matted close with dying and with dead.
Across the plain,
and far
away, passed on that hideous wrack,
While cavalier
and fantassin
dash in upon their track.
On Fontenoy, on
Fontenoy,
like eagles in the sun,
With bloody
plumes, the
Irish stand--the field is fought and won!