DROOP not, my brothers! I hear a glad strain -- We shall burst forth like streams from the winter night's chain; A flag is unfurled, a bright star of the sea, A ransom approaches -- we yet shall be free! Where the pines wave, where the light chamois leaps, Where the lone eagle hath built on the steeps; Where the snows glisten, the mountain-rills foam, Free as the falcon's wing, yet shall we roam. Where the hearth shines, where the kind looks are met, Where the smiles mingle, our place shall be yet! Crossing the desert, o'ersweeping the sea -- Droop not, my brothers! we yet shall be free! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CHANSON D'AUTOMNE by PAUL VERLAINE COWSLIPS AND LARKS by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES I SIT AND SEW by ALICE RUTH MOORE DUNBAR-NELSON THE MOURNING GARMENT: THE DESCRIPTION OF THE SHEPHERD AND HIS WIFE by ROBERT GREENE A CHRISTMAS GHOST-STORY; CHRISTMAS-EVE 1899 by THOMAS HARDY A PSALM OF LIFE by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW ANTONY AND [OR, TO] CLEOPATRA by WILLIAM HAINES LYTLE |