paroles de chanson James Fairfax (1922 - 1945) [An Average Man] - Manning
He
lived
a
quiet
and
a
tidy
life
and
that
was
all
that
could
be
said
about
him.
He
came
and
went
to
work,
he
liked
to
bowl
and
dress
in
vogue.
His
name
was
never
splashed
on
hoardings,
his
neighbours
said
he
seemed
a
pleasant
man
So
when
the
letter
from
the
War
Office
landed,
it
interrupted
a
routine
plan.
At
school
he'd
been
a
straight
C's
pupil,
average,
unnoticed
and
a
friend
to
few,
Well
read,
but
mainly
fiction,
a
watcher
of
the
football
on
a
Saturday
Afternoon.
He
never
went
the
big
store
markets,
preferred
the
service
at
the
corner
shop.
Had
his
hair
cut
every
fortnight,
liked
eating
chicken
and
a
nice
lamb
chop.
So
unobtrusive,
so
invisible,
he'd
always
feared
to
change
Stuck
to
the
sensible
proper
conduct
and
stayed
well
out
of
range.
The
call
to
arms
was
quite
disconcerting,
unnerving
and
a
bolt
from
the
blue.
For
once
he
sat
and
thought
about
a
future,
with
no
one
to
remember
him,
when
he
was
through.
A
little
plan
had
come
to
him,
like
a
soft
whisper
on
a
soothing
breeze
So
he
journeyed
to
his
roots
in
the
Scottish
Highlands
and
he
stood
by
the
lonely
lake
With
a
cutting
wrapped
in
clean
newspaper,
he
dug
foundations
for
the
little
seed,
Smoothed
the
soil
between
his
trembling
fingers
and
planted
in
the
earth
his
family's
tree
From
the
girl
they'd
branded
a
witch,
down
the
long
ages
it
grew
Each
leaf
revealing
special
stories,
each
branch
started
out
anew.
Each
twist
of
the
unfurling
curling
bark,
each
notch
on
the
twisted
frame.
It
called
to
James...
How
it
called
to
James...
"Remember
me,
for
I
was
once
alive..."
James
Fairfax
fell
in
the
last
battle
of
the
war
in
1945
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