paroles de chanson The Green Fields of France - Stigger , Ian Stuart
Well,
how
do
you
do
young
Willie
McBride?
Do
you
mind
if
I
sit
here
down
by
your
graveside?
And
rest
for
awhile
in
the
warm
summer
sun
I've
been
walking
all
day,
and
I'm
nearly
done
I
see
by
your
gravestone,
you
were
only
nineteen
When
you
joined
the
great
call-up
in
nineteen
sixteen
And
I
hope
you
died
quick,
and
I
hope
you
died
clean
Or
young
Willie
McBride,
was
it
slow
and
obscene?
Did
they
beat
the
drums
slowly?
Did
they
play
the
fife
loudly?
Did
they
play
the
death
march
as
they
lowered
you
down?
Did
the
band
play
the
Last
Post
and
chorus?
Did
the
pipes
play
the
Flowers
of
the
Forest?
Did
you
leave
a
wife
or
a
sweetheart
behind?
In
some
faithful
heart
is
your
memory
enshrined?
Although
you
died
back
in
nineteen-sixteen
In
that
faithful
heart
are
you
forever
nineteen
Or
are
you
a
stranger
without
even
a
name?
Enclosed
and
forever
behind
a
glass
frame
In
an
old
photograph,
torn,
battered
and
stained
And
faded
to
yellow,
in
a
brown
leather
frame
Well
the
sun,
now
it
shines,
on
the
green
fields
of
France
As
the
warm
summer
breeze,
that
makes
the
red
poppies
dance
And
look
how
the
sun
shines
from
under
the
clouds
There's
no
gas,
no
barbwire,
there's
no
guns
firing
now
But
here
in
this
graveyard
that's
still
no-man's
land
The
countless
white
crosses
stand
mute
in
the
sand
To
man's
blind
indifference
to
his
fellow
man
To
a
whole
generation,
that
was
butchered
and
damned
Young
Willie
McBride,
I
can't
help
wondering
why
Do
those
that
lie
here
know
why
that
they
died?
And
did
they
believe
when
they
answered
the
call
Did
they
really
believe
that
this
war
would
end
war?
The
sorrow,
the
suffering,
the
glory,
the
pain
The
killing
and
dying
were
all
done
in
vain
Young
Willie
McBride,
it
all
happened
again
And
again,
and
again,
and
again,
and
again
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