Hawkman
03-20-2010, 09:16 AM
When I was really very small
Perhaps just four or five
I used to watch the Scammel tractors
Gaily trundling by.
Upon their trailers, large as life,
Centurion tanks would ride
On their way to Bovingdon,
Or Salisbury plain, to hide.
I’d stand there, in the rain sometimes,
As in convoy they’d pass by,
Like giant Airfix kits I’d made,
My habit for a while.
At my back the woodland grove,
That bordered half our ground,
Hidden there from all and sundry,
I’d stand or hang around.
This woodland had a history
For a hand-grenade was found
A relic left from World War two
Just lying on the ground.
This was my eldest brother’s deed,
So it’s him we have to thank,
For my father, when he found it,
Threw it in the septic tank.
This facility with hand-grenades,
To find them where they lie,
My brother has retained it seems,
He doesn’t even try.
For when we walked the battlefields,
In France, around the Somme,
He couldn’t help but stumble over
Rusty old mills bombs.
Not wishing to explode himself,
He wisely let them be,
But if you don’t believe this tale,
They were photographed by me.
Perhaps just four or five
I used to watch the Scammel tractors
Gaily trundling by.
Upon their trailers, large as life,
Centurion tanks would ride
On their way to Bovingdon,
Or Salisbury plain, to hide.
I’d stand there, in the rain sometimes,
As in convoy they’d pass by,
Like giant Airfix kits I’d made,
My habit for a while.
At my back the woodland grove,
That bordered half our ground,
Hidden there from all and sundry,
I’d stand or hang around.
This woodland had a history
For a hand-grenade was found
A relic left from World War two
Just lying on the ground.
This was my eldest brother’s deed,
So it’s him we have to thank,
For my father, when he found it,
Threw it in the septic tank.
This facility with hand-grenades,
To find them where they lie,
My brother has retained it seems,
He doesn’t even try.
For when we walked the battlefields,
In France, around the Somme,
He couldn’t help but stumble over
Rusty old mills bombs.
Not wishing to explode himself,
He wisely let them be,
But if you don’t believe this tale,
They were photographed by me.