Star Spangled Banner
Unless you
know all four stanzas of the Star Spangled Banner, you may find this most
interesting. Perhaps most of you didn't realize what Francis Scott Key's
profession was or what he was doing on a ship. This is a good brush-up on your
history.
(Editor's
Note - Near the end of his life, the great science fiction author Isaac Asimov
wrote a short story about the four stanzas of our national anthem. However
brief, this well-circulated piece is an eye opener from the dearly departed
doctor...) "I have a weakness -- I am crazy, absolutely nuts, about our national
anthem. The words are difficult and the tune is almost impossible; but
frequently when I'm taking a shower, I sing it with as much power and emotion as
I can. It shakes me up every time."
NO REFUGE COULD SAVE: BY DR. ISAAC
ASIMOV
I was once asked to
speak at a luncheon. Taking my life in my hands, I announced I was going to sing
our national anthem -- all four stanzas. This was greeted with loud groans. One
man closed the door to the kitchen, where the noise of dishes and cutlery was
loud and distracting. "Thanks, Herb," I said.
"That's all right," he said. "It was at the request of
the kitchen staff."
I
explained the background of the anthem and then sang all four stanzas. Let me
tell you, those people had never heard it before -- or had never really
listened. I got a standing ovation. But it was not me; it was the
anthem.
More recently,
while conducting a seminar, I told my students the story of the anthem and sang
all four stanzas. Again there was a wild ovation and prolonged applause. And
again, it was the anthem and not me.
So now let me tell you how it came to be
written.
In 1812, the
United
States went to war with
Great
Britain,
primarily over freedom of the seas. We were in the right. For two years, we held
off the British, even though we were still a rather weak country.
Great
Britain was in a
life and death struggle with Napoleon. In fact, just as the United
States declared war, Napoleon marched
off to invade Russia.
If he won, as everyone expected, he would control Europe, and Great
Britain would be
isolated. It was no time for her to be involved in an American
war.
At first, our seamen
proved better than the British. After we won a battle on Lake Erie in 1813, the
American commander, Oliver Hazard Perry, sent the message, "We have met the
enemy and they are ours." However, the weight of the British navy beat down our
ships eventually. New
England, hard-hit by a tightening blockade, threatened
secession.
Meanwhile,
Napoleon was beaten in Russia
and in 1814 was forced to abdicate. Great Britain now turned its attention to
the United States, launching a three-pronged attack.
The northern prong was to come down Lake Champlain
toward New York
and seize parts of New
England.
The southern prong was to go up the Mississippi, take
New Orleans and paralyze
the west.
The central prong
was to head for the mid-Atlantic states and then attack Baltimore, the greatest port
south of New
York. If Baltimore was taken, the
nation, which still hugged the Atlantic coast, could be split in two. The fate
of the United
States, then,
rested to a large extent on the success or failure of the central
prong.
The British reached
the American coast, and on August 24, 1814, took Washington, D.C. Then they moved up
the Chesapeake Bay toward Baltimore. On September
12, they arrived and found 1,000 men in Fort McHenry, whose
guns controlled the harbor. If the British wished to take Baltimore, they would have
to take the fort.
On one of
the British ships was an aged physician, William Beanes, who had been arrested in Maryland and brought
along as a prisoner. Francis Scott Key, a lawyer and friend of the physician,
had come to the ship to negotiate his release.
The British captain was willing, but the two Americans
would have to wait. It was now the night of September 13, and the bombardment of
Fort
McHenry was
about to start.
As twilight
deepened, Key and Beanes saw the
American flag flying over Fort McHenry Through
the night, they heard bombs bursting and saw the red glare of rockets. They knew
the fort was resisting and the American flag was still flying. But toward
morning the bombardment ceased, and a dread silence fell. Either Fort McHenry had
surrendered and the British flag flew above it, or the bombardment had failed
and the American flag still flew.
As dawn began to brighten the eastern sky, Key and
Beanes stared out at the fort, trying
to see which flag flew over it. He and the physician must have asked each other
over and over, "Can you see the flag?"
After it was all finished, Key wrote a four stanza
poem telling the events of the night. Called "The Defense of Fort McHenry," it was
published in newspapers and swept the nation. Someone noted that the words fit
an old English tune called, "To Anacreon in Heaven" -- a difficult melody with
an uncomfortably large vocal range. For obvious reasons, Key's work became known
as "The Star Spangled Banner," and in 1931 Congress declared it the official
anthem of the United
States.
Now that you know the story, here are the words.
Presumably, the old doctor is speaking. This is what he asks
Key:
Oh! say, can you see, by the dawn's early
light,
What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last
gleaming?
Whose broad stripes
and bright stars, through the perilous fight,
O'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly
streaming?
And the rocket's red
glare, the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof thro' the night that our flag was still
there.
Oh! say, does that
star-spangled banner yet wave,
O'er the land of the free and the home of the
brave?
("Ramparts," in case you don't know, are the
protective walls or other elevations that surround a fort.) The first stanza
asks a question. The second gives an answer:
On the shore, dimly seen
thro' the mist of the deep
Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence
reposes,
What is that which
the breeze, o'er the towering steep.
As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half
discloses?
Now it catches the
gleam of the morning's first beam,
In full glory reflected, now shines on the
stream
'Tis the star-spangled
banner. Oh! long may it wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the
brave!
"The
towering steep" is again, the ramparts. The bombardment has failed, and the
British can do nothing more but sail away, their mission a failure. In the third
stanza I feel Key allows himself to gloat over the American triumph. In the
aftermath of the bombardment, Key probably was in no mood to act otherwise?
During World War I when the British were our Staunchest allies, this third
stanza was not sung. However, I know it, so here it
is:
And where is that band who so vauntingly
swore
That the havoc of war and the battle's confusion
A
home and a country should leave us no more?
Their blood has washed out their foul footstep's
pollution.
No refuge could save
the hireling and slave
From the
terror of flight, or the gloom of the grave,
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth
wave
O'er the land of the free
and the home of the brave.
(The fourth stanza, a pious hope for the future,
should be sung more slowly than the other three and with even deeper
feeling):
Oh! thus be it ever, when freemen shall
stand
Between their loved homes and the war's
desolation,
Blest with victory
and peace, may the Heaven - rescued land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a
nation.
Then conquer we must,
for our cause is just,
And this
be our motto --"In God is our trust."
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth
wave
O'er the land of the free
and the home of the brave.
I hope you will look at the national anthem with
new eyes. Listen to it, the next time you have a chance, with new ears. Pay
attention to the words. And don't let them ever take it away ... not even one
word of it.
AND IT'S SUNG
IN
ENGLISH!