The eagle stood his perch that day,
He did not want to fly at all,
He
did not choose to join the fray,
Where once there stood two towers tall.
They once were mine, he said, t'was planned,
These people who adopted
me,
To be their emblem proud and grand,
To show forth for the brave and
free.
They sang the praises of our land,
My spirit soared with every
crest,
The words that made us understand,
That people free are people
blessed.
But someone else tore wings from birds,
And reigned a terror from
above,
With naught a thought to noble words,
Nor care at all for what we
love.
They aimed full bore in evil roles,
Into the walls where people
were,
Into a place that housed good souls,
Who knew not what would now
occur.
The flames shot out, the smoke poured sour,
The structure broke and fell
to ground,
And those who could not flee the hour,
Became but one with what
rained down.
The eagle saw this awesome deed,
His people burned and fell and
died,
And seemed at once no more to need,
His emblem of their soul and
pride.
The fine bird bowed, his heart did ache,
He knew no more for what he
stood,
What once had been his noble stake,
Was now a burned out
neighborhood.
Is my new role to stand for naught?
Is there no more a place for me?
Is
there no spirit left to guard,
No pride in what was well and free?
Oh how I wish so long ago,
They'd picked another, so he said,
To
represent their lofty goals,
I cannot bear where this had led.
I cannot know the kind of heart,
That willingly destroys it all,
That
kills and burns and takes apart,
And does it for some pointless
call.
But as the smoke began to clear,
The eagle strained and looked
ahead,
And with his vision without peer,
Saw stirrings midst the rubbled
dread.
He saw some people still alive,
They hurried in to help the downed,
He
saw their spirit, will and drive,
They scraped and dug the pillaged
ground.
They saved a few, they mourned the lost,
They sent the word out far and
wide,
They would not worry for the cost,
They would not sacrifice their
pride.
They told the world at length and long,
Of justice, reconstruction,
too,
They vowed to right this awful wrong,
And build anew what was
askew.
They armed themselves with soul and right,
And promised never to
relent,
Until the evil knew their might,
And knew the full weight of their
bent.
The eagle felt himself reborn,
His purpose steady, n'er to wane,
His
faith and duty proudly worn,
He flies above us, strong again.