Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Switzerland and Austria: Vol. XVI. 1876–79.
Battle of Unterwalden
By James Montgomery (17711854)F
As the Gauls approached our shores,
Keels that darkened all the tide,
Tempesting the lake with oars.
With the clangor of alarms:
Shrill the signal-trumpet sang;
All our warriors leaped to arms.
While the frantic foe drew nigh;
Grim as watching wolves we stood,
Prompt as eagles stretched to fly.
Burst their overwhelming might;
Back we hurled them from the strand,
Oft returning to the fight.
Till the waves were warm with blood,
Till the booming waters swelled
As they sank beneath the flood.
Underwalden’s arms once more
Broke Oppression’s black array,
Dashed invasion from her shore.
Muttering vengeance as they fled:
Hope in us, by conquest fired,
Raised our spirits from the dead.
To the dead they soon returned;
Bright, on its eternal close,
Underwalden’s glory burned.