Remember Bull’s Run
Remember
Bull’s Run
Oh be easy, don’t you teaze me,
While I sing a bit of fun;
Soldiers flying, niggers crying,
See them push to Washington.
Off they scamper! Oh what a damper
To their tender, humane hearts;
Muskets dropping, hearts a throbbing,
Bodies left behind in carts.
Lee’s a coming! Hark, the drumming!
Fly you hireling Hessian knaves;
He will scourge you, he will purge you,
Run you dirty Lincoln slaves.
Johnston’s mettle will make you settle
Down in just and upright men,
If you promise for the future,
Not to take up arms again.
Oh, what sorrow, on to-morrow,
When you find your knapsacks gone;
Bread and water—what you fought for—
You’ll not find in Washington.
Despised as traitors, brother-haters,
You shall bear the mark of Cain;
Foolish gunners, first-rate runners,
Shed your brothers’ blood for gain.
Shame will crown you, tears will drown you,
Of the misery you have made;
Peace will leave you, Conscience grieve you,
Dupes of Abram Lincoln’s raid.
Oh! be easy, dont you teaze me,
I have sung you all the joke;
See them coming, see them running,
Heavens! see the awful smoke.
This work was published before January 1, 1929 and is anonymous or pseudonymous due to unknown authorship. It is in the public domain in the United States as well as countries and areas where the copyright terms of anonymous or pseudonymous works are 95 years or less since publication.
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