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id earth-- Lest she should grow--and they should pine in dearth. Go beat the spaniel, if he rouse thine ire, His servile nature may no more aspire-- But leave the lion in his lordly lair, Or he thine entrails in his rage will tear. Go, rob the linnet's unprotected nest, And rend her offspring, from her little breast; But leave the Eagle in his eyrie high, Or thy torn flesh shall hush his eaglet's cry. Fair France's lion was Napoleon! he Roamed o'er the land, a monarch proud and free: And when the Nations, in their pigmy might, Provoked the Lion to engage in fight, With gory jaw, he rent their legions strong, And left them bleaching the wide earth along. Fair France's Eagle was Napoleon! he Soared thro' her sky, a monarch proud and free: And when the boy-like kingdoms thought to bring The glorious soarer down with bleeding wing, With swift, fierce swoop, he darted from on high, And the rent pigmies, shrieked with mighty cry. Vain were their wishes, all their envy vain, They could not bring the soarer to the plain;-- Till Fate's fell arrow--surer than the rest-- Winged the far flight, and pierced his glorious breast. Then fell Napoleon, Eagle of his clime, By Fate's fell shaft, from yon proud heaven sublime: And when he fell, France knew no keener woe, Then the deep piercing of that mortal blow. The sweet land drooped, and sickened in her grief-- That hope so happy, had given truth so brief-- That Fate's fell shaft her glorious Bird had slain, No more o'er conquered earth to soar again. But not at once Napoleon breathes his last-- More woes must come--if now the worst be past. Napoleon's star, declining on his eye, Tells France shall yield him not a place to die. That he must hie him to an alien shore, And see his France, and blue-eyed boy no more. The noble Lion must be chained at length, By Fate's strong force, though not by man's weak strength. But, harmless now, that meaner things shall prey On whom they fled from, in his Glory's day. Oh! when the Chieftain turned to wave adieu To lovely France, across the waters blue, The iron man who never quailed in war, Where Death's conspiring darts flew fast and far-- If peering Envy marked no gushing tear-- Wept, wept to leave the land that was so dear-- And if that woe was mute--it was more deep, As deepest floods, in silent caverns sleep. But who are they to whose exalted name, He turns for friendship in his fall's deep shame? What fla
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