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There is a question mark at the end of the Star Spangled Banner.

Ok, this is something that came up recently while I was at my fiancee's graduation from the Rochester Institute of Technology. For those of you who don't know, the school has a high amount of deaf students who attend there, thanks to the National Technical Institute of the Deaf being located on it's campus. While the national anthem being performed, I was following along on the closed captioning large screen tv, and I noticed something, the question mark at the end of the song was missing.

Some of you are probably firing up Wikipedia right now to check the lyrics to see if there is, in fact, a question mark at the end. Others are probably wondering why it's such a big deal. Really, the reason why it kind of bugs me is that people seem to not really know what the anthem is about, they just kinda mindlessly sing the lyrics without really knowing what they mean. Wanna see what I mean? I got a video.

Those astute enough to pick up on the error will note that he sings "What so proudly we hailed..." twice and leaves out "or the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming." Anyway, before I break down the meaning of the song, It's time for a brief history lesson with Andy.

The tune for our anthem is actually a drinking song used by a gentleman's club and was a kind of sobriety test. If you could sing the song without wavering on it's notoriously difficult pitch, you were sober and could continue to drink. This is a bit of a reversal from today. Now when we HEAR it sung off key WE wish he had a drink.

Anyway, the lyrics are from a poem entitled "Defense of Fort McHenry" written in 1814 by Francis Scott Key after witnessing the bombardment of the fort during the War of 1812. Key was aboard a British war ship to try to negotiate the release of American prisoners. However, during the coarse of negotiations, Key found out about plans to attack the fort. Not wanting Key to tell the information to the Americans, he was detained on the ship until after the battle was done.

Key sat by that night, watching through the rain, the night and trying to make sure that the flag over the fort continued to fly. Should the flag be lowered, the fort was lost. Oddly enough, the flag he was watching that night would be lowered, as the night flag was a smaller storm flag flown during storms, the "star spangled banner" wouldn't be hoisted until the morning. So here you have Key, rooting for the Americans but forced to sit on the sidelines and hope things go his guy's way.

Finally when dawn broke and the Star Spangled Banner was once again hoisted over the fort, Key felt compelled to write a 4 verse poem about the night. That's right, not only is there a question mark, there are 3 other verse that are rarely sung.

Ok, so now that you know the background of the song, I'm gonna go through it and we'll discover why that question mark should be there. The way this is gonna work is I'll post a thought and then write what it means.

O! say can you see by the dawn's early light
What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming.
The speaker (Key) is asking reader/listener if they can make out the flag that had been flying over the fort right before the sun set and it could no longer be made out. In other words, did the fort protecting Baltimore fall?

Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight,
O'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming.
The speaker continues to say the item he is asking about was last seen flying over the ramparts, or defensive walls, of the fort. The last they knew, the flag was still flying over the battle taking place over the fort.

And the rockets' red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there.
Through out the night, to make sure the fort hadn't fallen, the speaker had been watching by way of rockets, which were basically fire works launched to illuminate the night, and bombs, exploding cannon balls, to make sure the flag was still flying over the fort.

O! say does that star-spangled banner yet wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
And here is the line that people always forget is a question. Is the flag still flying over the fort is what the speaker is asking. In other words, is the fort still protecting America?

In the three other verses the speaker is able to answer his own question, yes, the Star Spangled banner still does wave over the land of the free and home of the brave. Not only does he do that, but he goes on to say that as long as free men stand to protect the country, the flag will continue to fly over it. That's why I feel it's important to remember that that last line is a question. It isn't a matter of semantics and that it just isn't right without it, but the answer is the important part. And with out a question, there is no answer.

Does the flag still fly? As long as America is free, yes, yes it does.

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2 comments

 
Anonymous wrote 3 weeks 4 days ago

the ? implies the demise!

the question mark also implies the possibility that someday, America may not be free, and the flag will fly no more. otherwise, there would be no point in asking. and since the U.S. is an empire, and all empires rise and fall, the national anthem, between the lines, implies the demise of the empire it was written for.

 
Anonymous wrote 36 weeks 1 day ago

Thank you for breaking it down

Awesome! We were at Yankee stadium, read the words on the jumbo screen and the question mark "brave?" started a week long converstaion. I finally just "googled" it to end the confusion. Thank you.