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The Happy Warrior

Page 21

by Kerry B Collison


  * * *

  Soldier Boy

  Soldier Boy gone to war,

  To fight and die on a foreign shore,

  My blue-eyed boy I do adore,

  I fear you’re coming home no more.

  Soldier Boy in jungle green,

  Of blood and dying I do dream,

  Heart of my heart please be alive,

  When next my letter does arrive!

  Oh Soldier Boy, so long away,

  God keep you safe each breath I pray!

  Dearest one, your letters seem

  To be so few and far between.

  Oh Soldier Boy so brave and true,

  I cry each night my love for you.

  Oh Soldier Boy, love of my life,

  Please come home to your loving wife!

  Greg Brooks

  * * *

  The Setting Sun

  As I sit and watch the setting sun,

  In its fairest tropic splendour,

  My fondest thoughts are carried back

  To Mother, kind and tender.

  The romantic times I’ve spent with her

  I remember with delight,

  For the setting sun reminds me

  Of my lonesome one tonight.

  When twilight comes with its million stars

  And the sunlight rays are retreating,

  They seem to kiss the hills goodnight

  As we did when last meeting.

  And so my prayer tonight is for my loved one lonely

  And may the setting sun, in its beams of life and beauty

  Spread its sunny rays upon us two

  When Australia’s done her duty.

  D. Greene

  New Guinea, 25th November 1942

  (AWM PR 83 217)

  * * *

  Desert Evening

  Night falling and the stars

  Peek out upon the stones and sand.

  Cassiopeia and the Little Plough

  Twinkle in a cloudless sky

  And the sun sinks in a flaming glow.

  Our thoughts turn to that other life

  Of trees and flowers and lawns,

  And memories of our dear ones far away

  Crowd before the lonely mind.

  A distant murmur, broken beat

  Of bombers, going on with fell intent

  To blast and burn and harry.

  Men like us who dream of home

  In the evening’s quiet peace.

  Streaks of light and flashes

  Dull thuds and boom of bombs

  Which fall upon a fort and bring

  In the quiet peace of eve

  A grim realisation of uneasy life

  Which brooks upon this desert.

  Bare, aloof, unfriendly,

  Full of hidden things inimical to men.

  And besides the dreams of pleasant places,

  Of parks and streams and cosy houses

  Filled with happy children,

  The spectre of a hungry beast,

  A beast of prey which strangles one

  With thirst, torments with flies,

  And hides amongst the rocks

  Poisonous things, snakes and scorpions.

  And yet again there are timid things of peaceful mood,

  Frightened hares and graceful gazelles

  Affrighted by our rumbling tanks

  And so, our evening dream of home

  Is shattered by grim thoughts.

  We turn and stoop into our desert home

  Dug deep, of stones and sandbags,

  And there upon a box or petrol tin

  Sit around a makeshift table

  And drink our ale or good old Scotch

  And forget it all — perhaps?

  Soon we bid goodnight.

  Creeping to our lonely beds

  Not unhappy, yet missing all those things we love.

  The job is to be done;

  We can endure it all

  Till that great day when

  We shall be home again.

  B. M. Laird

  * * *

  Airmail Palestine

  “Praise God from whom all blessings flow,”

  The Padre said. Row on row

  The rusting hymn books in the sun.

  Flickered, were folded, thin as one.

  A thousand voices stirred the air were silent,

  Heads were bent in prayer.

  Above the Padre’s voice we heard

  An engine drone, just like a bird.

  With silvered wings we saw the plane

  Above the sandhills out to sea,

  Heading with mail to Galilee.

  And in the clouds we saw again,

  Our homes, the noonday shimmering sun

  On the farm, beach and station run.

  The stock knee-high in summer grass,

  The shearers nodding as we pass.

  Each stand: the silos crammed with wheat,

  The sheep dogs panting in the heat,

  The breakers curl, the lash of foam,

  The aching, taunting thoughts of home.

  “Praise God from who...” and each man bows

  His head to thank his God who sends,

  Half way across the world, the mail,

  Who deems those engines shall not fail.

  But that they bring across the sea,

  The mail, to his own Galilee.

  Anon

  South Australia

  * * *

  In our Great and Wonderful Country

  We have beauty from the hills to the sea,

  Like the waves on the oceans of our coastline

  In our great country

  We are free

  We cast our thoughts to the early Settlers,

  Who came from many other distant lands

  To make our Country their homeland

  Where the hard toils were done by hand.

  When we travel through our great Outback,

  Where the cattle sheep and brumbies graze,

  With the closing of a beautiful day

  It appears that the whole world is ablaze.

  ’Neath the blue sky in the Bushland

  The big gums stand as with pride

  As they show their admiration for our Country

  And for the Stockmen in Australia who ride.

  The Stockmen are up at break of day

  As they do in the great Outback,

  Riding their horses to the big round up

  Far off the beaten track.

  We have our spacious farmlands

  With acres of golden grain;

  Nearby are the herds of cattle grazing

  Feeding after the falls of the wonderful rain.

  When we travel to our great south-east,

  Where the beautiful pine trees grow,

  We can see more beauty of our great land —

  It is a sight that we all know.

  The beautiful City of Adelaide,

  Surrounded by parks and trees,

  With gardens of beautiful flowers,

  The freshness fills the breeze.

  Sid Buckingham

  * * *

  Leave the Panels Down

  The little grey house had a lonely look,

  There wasn’t a soul around

  But we saw as we crossed the shallow brook

  That the slip rails lay on the ground.

  We rode in up to the kitchen door

  For the stock might take the track,

  But a woman said with a weary smile

  “My boys are absent many a mile,

  And we’ll leave the panels down awhile

  To wait till the lads come back.”

  And over our southern, sunny land

  The same great thought holds true,

  From the timbered hills to the parching sand

  And the wide green stretches too.

  All the boys who’ve done their bit,

  Though many a pal we’ll lack,

  Whether they come fro
m bush or town

  Will know they’ll find the panels down

  To the hearts they left, and the love will crown —

  The day that the lads get back.

  Lt S. D. Leslie

  (AWM 2 DRL 435)

  * * *

  They Also Serve

  We’ve poems to our heroes and the deeds that they have done,

  And though their wreaths of laurel are begrudged to them by none,

  There are braver souls, I’ll warrant, far from trench or North Sea foam,

  In the Women of the Empire, in the girls who stayed at home.

  They were with us when our transports left our shores two years agone,

  In spirit torn and anguished with the sons who they had borne,

  They were with us at the landing — that immortal April Day –

  And the lads who rushed the beaches bore no braver souls than they.

  They were with us at Cape Helles, with a father, husband, son,

  With the weary years of waiting for their loved ones just begun;

  Ne’er a man fell backward stricken, but the bleeding wound he bore

  Was felt by someone waiting on some far-removed shore.

  They had no glow of battle such as spurred us on our way,

  In a wearying inaction they must pass away each day;

  No torment, hardship, hunger, no heat, nor thirst, nor cold,

  But they who waited learned it, and felt with us fourfold.

  And some have felt the passing of some beloved soul,

  Where shrapnel cracked above us, or where Jutland’s waters roll;

  And some are waiting, waiting with anxious weary brain,

  And fearing, praying, hoping with dull soul-searching pain.

  Then here’s my tribute to them, high or lowly, rich or poor,

  The Women of our Empire who have helped us win the war;

  To mothers, wives and sweethearts, from every mother’s son,

  To the Women of our Empire from the ‘man behind the gun’.

  Lt S. D. Leslie

  A. A. Pay Corp AIF

  (AWM 2 DRL 435)

  * * *

  Safe and Well

  When you’re suckin’ at your pencil

  And you don’t know what to say

  When you wish the bloody censor

  Hadn’t seen the light of day,

  There’s always one small item left

  Considered good to tell

  It doesn’t take much writing,

  “Dear Mum, I’m safe and well.”

  The tucker may be ‘onkus’,

  The water pretty crook

  You haven’t had a drink of beer

  Since Wavell took Tobruk,

  You’ve been up before the skipper

  For being AWL.

  But take your pen and write it down:

  “Dear Mum, I’m safe and well.”

  You may have beard the Jerry bomber

  Come screaming overhead,

  And it wasn’t very pleasant

  To be dodging lumps of lead,

  When you’re lying in the trenches

  ’Midst hail of shot and shell

  You still have time to send a line —

  “Dear Mum, I’m safe and well.”

  A grey haired Mother standing

  Beside an old bush track

  Waiting for the mailman

  For news of soldier, Jack,

  A smile lights up her worried face

  With beauty words can’t tell

  As she reads the dear familiar words:

  “Dear Mother, I’m safe and well.”

  Anon

  (AWM PR 00526)

  * * *

  Soldiers’ Dream

  Leaning on my rifle

  As I do my two hour shift,

  Not very regimental

  But my thoughts can’t help but drift.

  And I dream of my home town

  And the girl I left behind,

  The days we spent together

  Keep running through my mind.

  I see fair Sydney Harbour

  And the happy carefree throng,

  The ferry boat to Manly

  And surfing all day long.

  The rocks and hills and mountains,

  The miles of sun drenched plains,

  While golden fields of wheat await

  The coming of the rains.

  Someday I’ll stop my dreaming

  Of that far land far away,

  For I’ll be in fair Australia:

  I’ll be home to stay.

  Anon

  (AWM PR 00526)

  * * *

  Untitled

  When this cruel war is over

  And I’m starting home once more

  I can see you waiting, Darling,

  On the good old Aussie shore.

  When I go to sleep, my precious,

  In dreams your face I see,

  For I live in hopes and memories

  For you’re all the world to me.

  As I go on down life’s pathway

  In struggles, war and strife,

  I’ll be back again, I hope, dear

  For you’re my own sweet darling wife.

  Dvr W.T. White (?)

  (AWM PR 87 175)

  * * *

  An Old Faded Picture

  There’s an old faded picture hanging on our wall,

  It’s ancient paper mottled with no print left at all,

  The scene is of lost days, with beauty that’s still,

  Of a tank on a stand, plus a lone windmill.

  The mill has a shroud of hard red rust

  That matches the colour of the local dust,

  Now the tank is empty, the stand is rotten,

  The water trough gone, and all but forgotten.

  But the scene wasn’t always of rust and of still

  For once they were shining the tank and the mill,

  As they worked together by day and by night

  To man and beast a most wonderful sight.

  Now there are many memories but very few lingers,

  The rest run away like sand through old fingers;

  There’s an old faded picture hanging on our wall

  It’s ancient paper mottled. with no print left at all.

  Tim Lawrance

  20 August 1990

  * * *

  Forgetting

  Forget You ? Well perhaps I may

  Forget the very charming way

  You smile, and then perhaps I might

  Forget your eyes, your walk, your height.

  Somehow I even may forget

  The way you hold a cigarette

  So carelessly, and who can tell

  I may forget your voice as well.

  With nonchalance and sans regret

  All these things I might forget,

  But the task too difficult to do

  Would be forgetting — I Love You.

  Cpl M. M. Carroll

  (AWM PR 00544)

  * * *

  Our Parting

  In this land so hot and sultry

  With its rain and heavy dew

  With its tin and rice and rubber

  Here I sit and dream of you.

  I often see you as we parted

  How you smiled to hide the tear,

  How you played your heart with courage

  How I loved you then, my dear.

  I tried to hide my feelings

  With a carefree jovial air —

  You must have thought me heartless

  And that I ceased to care.

  But just behind the reckless smile

  I fought a bitter fight,

  I felt the pangs of parting

  As you did, Dear, that night.

  I felt the tempter at my side,

  To me he spoke quite clear

  He said “The price you’re asked to pay

  Is costing you too dear!”

  But if I had but turned m
y head

  And “Yes!” to him had said

  Unworthy of you I’d have been —

  ’Twere better I were dead.

  I know you miss me every hour,

  For me each night you pray,

  I know you long for my return

  Though long and rough the way.

  But if to you I cannot come

  With honour, head held high,

  I know you will remember me

  Our love could never die.

  So as I think of you each night

  I pray with all my heart

  That we will reunited be

  When we have played our part.

  Jimmy Dickinson

  2 AASC AIF Malaya

  Killed in action 14 February1942

  (AWM 3 DRL 6768A)

  * * *

  Take this Message

  Take this message to my Mother

  Far across the deep blue sea

  It will fill her heart with pleasure

  She will be glad to hear from me.

  How she wept when last we parted,

  How it filled her heart with pain

  And she said “Goodbye, God bless you,

  We may never meet again!”

  Take this message to my Mother,

  It is filled with words of joy

  Tell her that her prayers are answered

  God protects her little boy,

  Tell her to be glad and cheerful

  And pray for me where’er I roam,

  And ere long I turn my footsteps

  Back toward my dear old home.

  Take this message to my Mother

  It is filled with words of love,

  If on earth I ne’er shall see her

  Tell her we shall meet above,

  Where there is no hour of parting

  All is peace and love and joy.

  God will bless my dear old Mother

  And protect her absent boy.

  Anon

  * * *

  There’s a Land They Call Australia.

  There’s a land they call Australia,

  It’s a land we love so well,

  For it’s there we learn to soldier

  And Britain’s Army swell.

  And often times when we’re abroad

  Our thoughts will surely turn

  To Aussie, good old Aussie,

 

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