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are feared as soldiers bold. Loyal and obedient, we'll kill and die when told. (Yes sir!) Liberty is not for me, I know my rightful place. Upon my knees before our king, who God enthroned with grace. So come all ye bold Canadians and gird your trusty might. We'll make the American libertines regret they picked a fight. For order and good government
"Chords of Fame" Studio recording: Greatest Hits (1970) Live recordings: Gunfight at Carnegie Hall (March 27, 1970,) Amchitka, The 1970 Concert That Launched Greenpeace (October 16, 1970,) "Christine Keeler" Demo recording: The Broadside Tapes 1 (1989, recorded 1963) About Christine Keeler and Mandy Rice-Davies, two women at the heart of the ...
"Sister Susie's Sewing Shirts for Soldiers" is a World War I-era song that tells about a young girl sewing shirts for soldiers fighting abroad. Her efforts are in vain however, as "Some soldiers send epistles, say they'd sooner sleep in thistles, than the saucy soft short shirts for soldiers sister Susie sews."
This behaviour was found at the small-unit level, sections, platoons or companies, usually observed by the "other ranks", e.g., privates and non-commissioned officers. Examples were found from the lone soldier standing sentry duty, refusing to fire on exposed enemy soldiers, up to snipers, machine-guns teams and even field-artillery batteries.
"Christmas in the Trenches" is a ballad from John McCutcheon's 1984 album Winter Solstice. It tells the story of the 1914 Christmas Truce between the British and German lines on the Western Front during the Great War from the perspective of a fictional British soldier. Although Francis Tolliver is a fictional character, the event depicted in ...
William Scott (April 6, 1839 – April 17, 1862) was a Union Army soldier during the American Civil War. He was the "Sleeping Sentinel" who was pardoned by Abraham Lincoln and memorialized by a poem and then a 1914 silent film .
Songs of the Shining Trenches of Combat is a musical album containing communist songs and hymns written by members of the Communist Party of Peru. Published in 1999, it was recorded clandestinely by imprisoned members and sympathizers of the CPP between 1990 and 1992 in the Miguel Castro Castro and the Lurigancho Penitentiary.
The Chords sacked Hassett, and the former Vibrators' singer Kip Herring stepped in. [1] The new line-up was featured on the cover of their next single, "One More Minute", which arrived in May 1981. [1] It was a flop, as was August's "Turn Away Again", and the Chords called it a day the following month. [1]