“Yes, in the hour of peril away
with pleasure’s thrall!
Let honor take the lance and steed to
meet our country’s call.
For those who craven in the fight refuse
to meet the foe
Shall sink beneath the feet of all struck
by a bitterer blow;
In moments when fair honor’s crown
is offered to the brave
And dangers yawn around our State, deep
as the deadly grave,
’Tis right strong arms and sturdy
hearts should take the sword of might,
And eagerly for Fatherland descend into
the fight.
To arms, to arms,
my captains!
Sound, clarions;
trumpets, blow;
And let the thundering
kettle-drum
Give challenge
to the foe.
“Then lay aside the silken robes,
the glittering brocade;
Be all in vest of leather and twisted
steel arrayed;
On each left arm be hung the shield, safe
guardian of the breast,
And take the crooked scimitar and put
the lance in rest,
And face the fortune of the day, for it
is vain to fly,
And the coward and the braggart now alone
are doomed to die.
And let each manly bosom show, in the
impending fray,
A valor such as Mars himself in fury might
display.
To arms, to arms,
my captains!
Sound, clarions;
trumpets, blow;
And let the thundering
kettle-drum
Give challenge
to the foe.
He spoke, and at his valiant words, that
rang through all the square,
The veriest cowards of the town resolved
to do and dare;
And stirred by honor’s eager fire
forth from the gate they stream,
And plumes are waving in the air, and
spears and falchions gleam;
And turbaned heads and faces fierce, and
smiles in anger quenched,
And sweating steeds and flashing spurs
and hands in fury clenched,
Follow the fluttering banners that toward
the vega swarm,
And many a voice re-echoes the words of
wild alarm.
To
arms, to arms, my captains!
Sound,
clarions; trumpets, blow;
And
let the thundering kettle-drum
Give
challenge to the foe.
And, like the timid lambs that crowd with
bleatings in the fold,
When they advancing to their throats the
furious wolf behold,
The lovely Moorish maidens, with wet but
flashing eyes,
Are crowded in a public square and fill
the air with cries;
And tho’, like tender women, ’tis
vain for them to arm,
Yet loudly they re-echo the words of the
alarm.
To heaven they cry for succor, and, while
to heaven they pray,
They call the knights they love so well
to arm them for the fray.
To
arms, to arms, my captains!
Sound,
clarions; trumpets, blow;
And
let the thundering kettle-drum
Give
challenge to the foe.