Lyrics The Unknown Soldier - Ralph McTell
More
than
fifty
thousand
names
Are
carved
on
Ypres'
Menin
gate
Of
soldiers
who
have
no
known
graves
Just
their
destiny
and
date
Witness
and
last
testament
Name
and
rank
and
regiment
Is
now
all
that
survives
From
so
many
squandered
lives
And
for
every
name
inscribed
The
poor
bereaved
were
left
to
mourn
The
passing
of
all
those
who
died
With
no
white
cross
on
tended
lawn
No
place
to
go
to
contemplate
The
sacrifice
this
wicked
waste
No
footprint
left
to
show
where
once
they
trod
Allegedly
known
unto
god
From
Ypres
Arras
Aisne
and
Somme
Six
unknown
soldiers
were
exhumed
A
blindfold
general
picked
one
man
And
reverently
they
brought
him
home
Six
black
horses
drew
the
hearse
Through
silent
London
crowds
immersed
In
deepest
thought
belief
or
wishful
prayer
That
it
might
be
their
own
boy
there
The
metal
tyres
on
the
carriage
wheels
Played
the
tuneless
requiem
The
sky
as
grey
as
bayonet
steel
Above
the
sombre
hatless
men
One
more
enemy
to
kill
That
remaining
sense
of
guilt
That
through
it
all
somehow
they
had
survived
Returned
to
mothers
sweethearts
wives
Familiar
streets
their
own
backyards
Their
medals
and
all
praise
ignored
Relieved
to
be
his
honour
guard
And
walk
with
him
their
true
reward
While
far
from
pomp
and
circumstance
Across
the
autumn
fields
of
France
The
trenches
start
to
slowly
fill
and
fade
The
bloody
page
turned
by
the
ploughman's
blade
Thankfully
we'll
never
know
If
he
was
constant
strong
or
frail
Scared
or
brave
in
equal
parts
Country
tanned
or
city
pale
A
carefree
youth
or
thoughtful
lad
Not
wholly
good
or
wholly
bad
A
bomb
does
not
judge
how
you
played
your
part
A
bullet
stops
a
lions
heart
With
softest
cloth
and
gentlest
broom
To
sweep
and
wipe
cathedral
dust
Like
dried
tears
from
this
marble
tomb
Take
care
for
he
was
one
of
us
In
perfect
irony
and
grief
The
bride's
bouquet
becomes
a
wreath
And
wrapped
beneath
dark
angels
folded
wings
Tommy
Atkins
rests
with
kings
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