Page:Poems that every child should know (ed. Burt, 1904).djvu/336

298 That line 'twere suicide to meet,

And perish at their tyrant's feet;

How could they rest within their graves,

And leave their homes, the homes of slaves!

Would not they feel their children tread,

With clanging chains, above their head?

It must not be; this day, this hour,

Annihilates the invader's power;

All Switzerland is in the field;

She will not fly,—she cannot yield,—

She must not fall; her better fate

Here gives her an immortal date.

Few were the numbers she could boast,

But every freeman was a host,

And felt as 'twere a secret known

That one should turn the scale alone,

While each unto himself was he

On whose sole arm hung victory.

It did depend on one indeed;

Behold him,—Arnold Winkelried;

There sounds not to the trump of fame

The echo of a nobler name.

Unmarked he stood amid the throng,

In rumination deep and long,

Till you might see, with sudden grace,

The very thought come o'er his face;

And, by the motion of his form,

Anticipate the bursting storm,

And, by the uplifting of his brow,

Tell where the bolt would strike, and how.