The Alamo | |
| The leaves of the cottonwoods hung motionless As outside the walls Santa Anna's horde closed in. A small band of Texans watched and waited Preoccupied by combat and how life would end.
The battle raged from building to building Till the old mission's chapel was the last to fall. Over 180 Texans died fighting to the man Never to yield, surrender or crawl.
Six weeks later Sam Houston rallied his forces With "Remember the Alamo" as their battle cry. Attacking and defeating Santa Anna's army To win independence for Texas or die.
The Spanish word for "cottonwood" is "Alamo" The long time popular name for the mission. Today the stout-walled old chapel still stands Preserved as a shrine of sacrifice and tradition. | By Tom Zart Copyright 2007 Listed April 10, 2007 Tom Zart's site Note... This poem has been listed since the battle of the Alamo was a critical event in Texas's "lone star" being added to Old Glory as a state of the USA. |
It is illegal to use this poem without the author's permission. ~~ Send your comments and/or use permission request to Tom. ~~ |