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Whilst out one cold November day I watched a young man start to play Where grass no longer cared to grow I’d say his years, seventeen or so! With trumpet pressed against his lips Then lightest touch of fingertips A tune which ripped into my soul The sound of church bells then did toll! Eleven times they gently wept Then silence of two minutes crept No sound was heard for miles away On this we name Armistice Day! With that the lad just smiled then went Into a mist from not known whence Upon the ground just where he stood Were poppies red like ruby blood! Amongst the poppies laid a cross Made of wood outgrown in moss Words inscribed said age unknown This trumpeter can now go home! © by LynnKaren
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Nov 10, 2016
Nov 10, 2016 at 4:43 PM UTC
The Trumpeter
Whilst out one cold November day I watched a young man start to play Where grass no longer cared to grow I’d say his years, seventeen or so! With trumpet pressed against his lips Then lightest touch of fingertips A tune which ripped into my soul The sound of church bells then did toll! Eleven times they gently wept Then silence of two minutes crept No sound was heard for miles away On this we name Armistice Day! With that the lad just smiled then went Into a mist from not known whence Upon the ground just where he stood Were poppies red like ruby blood! Amongst the poppies laid a cross Made of wood outgrown in moss Words inscribed said age unknown This trumpeter can now go home! © by LynnKaren
On the eleventh day of the eleventh hour and the eleventh month 1918, The guns of the western front fell silent after more than four years.
lynn-karen
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Nov 10, 2016
Nov 10, 2016 at 4:43 PM UTC
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