paroles de chanson Fire & Flame - The Longest Johns
Let
me
sing
you
a
song,
boys,
of
fire
and
flame
Of
a
French
ammo
ship,
the
Mont-Blanc
was
her
name
How
the
brave
Nova
Scotia
was
never
the
same
On
the
morning
when
Halifax
burned
'Twas
in
early
December
1917
She
was
packed
to
the
gills
with
Grade
A
T-N-T
They
were
bound
for
the
fighting
in
High
Germany
When
towards
them
the
other
ship
turned
The
Norweigan
ship
Imo,
some
fault
in
her
gears
She
struck
Mont-Blanc's
side
like
the
mightiest
of
spears
And
the
benzol
ignited
the
captain's
worst
fears
As
the
fire
consumed
bow
to
stern
The
people
gazed
on
from
their
safe
distant
rooms
Watched
the
soot
and
the
smoke
fill
the
sky
with
their
plumes
But
within,
the
ships
cargo
would
spell
all
their
dooms
How
were
they
to
know
to
be
concerned?
The
crew
rowed
for
shore,
lest
they
burn
or
they
drown
They
cried,
"Save
your
souls!"
as
they
ran
through
the
town
But
their
warnings
were
nothing
but
strange
foreign
sounds
For
the
townsfolk,
no
French
had
they
learned
One
man,
Patrick
Coleman,
in
the
railway's
employ
Sent
word,
"Stop
the
trains
or
they'll
all
be
destroyed
This
will
be
my
last
message,
farewell
to
you,
boys"
For
a
true
hero's
death
he
had
earned
An
explosion,
colossal,
when
the
munitions
blew
Devastation
and
debris
for
miles
fired
through
The
Mont-Blanc
was
gone,
and
the
town
with
it,
too
And
the
waters
raged
up
in
return
There
were
heroes
and
angels
all
fated
to
die
Over
two
thousand
souls
laid
to
rest
by-and-by
We
will
always
remember
and
lift
a
glass
high
To
the
morning
when
Halifax
burned
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