The Soldier

Album: Writer Of Songs (1972)
Play Video
  • Soldier By Harvey Andrews

    In a station in the city, a British soldier stood
    Talking to the people there, if the people would
    Some just stared in hatred, and others turned in pain
    And the lonely British soldier wished he was back home again

    Come join the British Army! Said the posters in his town
    See the world and have your fun come serve before the Crown
    The jobs were hard to come by and he could not face the dole
    So he took his country's shilling and enlisted on the roll

    For there was no fear of fighting, the Empire long was lost
    Just ten years in the army getting paid for being bossed
    Then leave a man experienced, a man who's made the grade
    A medal and a pension, some mem'ries and a trade

    Then came the call to Ireland as the call had come before
    Another bloody chapter in an endless civil war
    The priests they stood on both sides, the priests they stood behind
    Another fight in Jesus name, the blind against the blind

    The soldier stood between them between the whistling stones
    And then the broken bottles that led to broken bones
    The petrol bombs that burnt his hands, the nails that pierced his skin
    And wished that he had stayed at home surrounded by his kin

    The station filled with people the soldier soon was bored
    But better in the station than where the people warred
    The room filled up with mothers with daughters and with sons
    Who stared with itchy fingers at the soldier and his guns

    A yell of fear, a screech of brakes, the shattering of glass
    The window of the station broke to let the package pass
    A scream came from the mothers as they ran towards the door
    Dragging children crying from the bomb upon the floor

    The soldier stood and could not move his gun he could not use
    He knew the bomb had seconds and not minutes on the fuse
    He could not run and pick it up and throw it in the street
    There were far too many people there too many running feet

    Take cover! yelled the soldier, Take cover for your lives
    And the Irishmen threw down their young and stood before their wives
    They turned towards the soldier, their eyes alive with fear
    For God's sake save our children or they'll end their short lives here

    The soldier moved towards the bomb his stomach like a stone
    Why was this his battle God, why was he now alone
    He lay down on the package and he murmured one farewell
    To those at home in England, to those he loved so well

    He saw the sights of summer, felt the wind upon his brow
    The young girls in the city parks how precious were they now
    The soaring of the swallow, the beauty of the swan
    The music of the turning world so soon would it be gone

    A muffled soft explosion and the room began to quake
    The soldier blown across the floor his blood a crimson lake
    They never heard him cry or shout, they never heard him moan
    And they turned their children's faces from the blood and from the bone

    The crowd outside soon gathered and the ambulances came
    To carry off the body of a pawn lost in the game
    And the crowd they clapped and jeered and they sang their rebel song
    One soldier less to interfere where he did not belong

    And will the children growing up learn at their mothers' knee
    The story of the soldier who bought their liberty
    Who used his youthful body as a means towards an end
    Who gave his life to those who called him murderer not friend


    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Muhammad Ali: His Musical Legacy and the Songs he Inspired

Muhammad Ali: His Musical Legacy and the Songs he InspiredSong Writing

Before he was the champ, Ali released an album called I Am The Greatest!, but his musical influence is best heard in the songs he inspired.

Michael Sweet of Stryper

Michael Sweet of StryperSongwriter Interviews

Find out how God and glam metal go together from the Stryper frontman.

Devo

DevoSongwriter Interviews

Devo founders Mark Mothersbaugh and Jerry Casale take us into their world of subversive performance art. They may be right about the De-Evoloution thing.

Dennis DeYoung

Dennis DeYoungSongwriter Interviews

Dennis DeYoung explains why "Mr. Roboto" is the defining Styx song, and what the "gathering of angels" represents in "Come Sail Away."

Tom Bailey of Thompson Twins

Tom Bailey of Thompson TwinsSongwriter Interviews

Tom stopped performing Thompson Twins songs in 1987, in part because of their personal nature: "Hold Me Now" came after an argument with his bandmate/girlfriend Alannah Currie.

Evolution Of The Prince Symbol

Evolution Of The Prince SymbolSong Writing

The evolution of the symbol that was Prince's name from 1993-2000.