Author Topic: When the Tigers broke free  (Read 582 times)

Offline Odin

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When the Tigers broke free
« on: September 13, 2001, 01:26:00 AM »
When The Tigers Broke Free

It was just before dawn
One miserable morning in black 'forty four.
When the forward commander
Was told to sit tight
When he asked that his men be withdrawn.
And the Generals gave thanks
As the other ranks held back
The enemy tanks for a while.
And the Anzio bridgehead
Was held for the price
Of a few hundred ordinary lives.

And old King George
Sent Mother a note
When he heard that father was gone.
It was, I recall,
In the form of a scroll,
With gold leaf and all.

And I found it one day
In a drawer of old photographs, hidden away.
And my eyes still grow damp to remember
His Majesty signed
With his own rubber stamp.

It was dark all around.
There was frost in the ground
When the tigers broke free.
And no one survived
From the Royal Fusiliers Company C.
They were all left behind,
Most of them dead,
The rest of them dying.
And that's how the High Command
Took my daddy from me.

By Roger Waters

Lets hope that in the next few years time our kids dont have to write songs or poems about us in this situation
<S> Odin

[ 09-13-2001: Message edited by: VonBeer ]

Offline Maverick

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When the Tigers broke free
« Reply #1 on: September 13, 2001, 02:48:00 PM »
Von Beer,

There are no peoms about other conflicts. Where no one tried to stop or help. The dead unmourned by the uncaring who died because they would not help.

There are dead in every conflict. Some died fighting. Some died cowering. Some lived because they did fight.

Mav
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