The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #5422   Message #3257072
Posted By: Q (Frank Staplin)
14-Nov-11 - 06:01 PM
Thread Name: Origins: Unreconstructed rebel/Good Old Rebel
Subject: Lyr Add: WE KNOW THAT WE WERE REBELS (C Prentice)
Lyr. Add: WE KNOW THAT WE WERE REBELS
Or. Why Can We Not Be Brothers?
Clarence Prentice

Why can we not be brothers? the battle now is o'er;
We've laid our bruis'd arms on the field, to take them up no more;
We whu have fought you hard and long, now overpower'd, stand
As poor defenceless prisioners in our own native land.

Chorus-
We know that we were rebels,
And we don't deny the name,
We speak of that which we have done
With grief, but not with shame !

But we have rights most sacred, by solemn compact bound,
Seal'd by the blood that freely gush'd from many a ghastly wound;
When LEE gave up his trusty sword, and his men laid down their arms,
It was that they should live at home, secure from war's dire harms.

And surely, since we're now disarm'd, we are not to be dreaded,
Our old chiefs who on many fields our trusty columns headed,
Are fast within an iron grasp, and manicled with chains,
Perchance, 'twixt dreary walls to stay as long as life remains !

O shame upon the coward band, who in the conflict dire,
Went not to battle for their cause, 'mid the ranks of steel and fire,
Yet now, since all the fighting's done, are hourly heard to cry:
"Down with the traitors ! hang them all ! Rebel dog shall die !

We know that we were Rebels, we don't deny the name,
We speak of that which we have done with grief, but not with shame !
And we never will acknowledge that the blood the South has spilt,
Was shed defending what we deem'd a cause of wrong and guilt.

Allan's Lone Star Ballads. A Collection of Southern Patriotic Songs Made During Confederate Times. Compiled and revised by Francis D. Allen. Burt Franklin, New York, 1874. Reprinted 1970.