| In the early dawn the Bishops' men
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| Shivered in the damp
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| But the shiver came not from the cold
|
| And spread throughout the camp
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| The trembling horses sensed the fear
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| Of silent thoughtful men
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| Who prayed that wives and families
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| Might see them once again
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| The bishops sent a dawn patrol
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| To investigate the weight
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| Of forces at the King’s command
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| Ensconced behind the gate
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| The ground mist hid the patrol’s approach
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| As they drew close enough to show
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| The sentries on the battlements
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| And an archer drew his bow
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| From the topmost tower a sentry fell
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| As an arrow pierced his skull
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| And his headlong flight into the moat
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| Seemed that of a gull
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| The patrol reported little
|
| There was nothing much to see
|
| But the strong and silent castle
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| A symbol of the free
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| The King’s men took communion
|
| As the first rays of the sun
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| Lit up the castle’s gloomy walls
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| The fatal day begun
|
| From the castle green the rooks took flight
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| To the high trees in the east
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| To their carrion minds the battlefield
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| Set a table for a feast
|
| A tide of black, the Bishops' men
|
| Equality their right
|
| Swarmed like ants across the hill
|
| Their aim at last in sight
|
| The King’s men dressed in purest white
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| Were driven back by force
|
| And the fighting grew more violent
|
| As the battle took its course
|
| The Bishops gave the order
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| No mercy to be shown
|
| The sacrifice will reap rewards
|
| When the King is overthrown
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| The sight of children lying dead
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| Made hardened soldiers weep
|
| The outer walls began to fall
|
| They moved towards the keep
|
| The rooks surveyed the battlefield
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| Their hungry beady eyes
|
| Revelled in the sight of death
|
| Showing no surprise
|
| The pressure mounted steadily
|
| As the Bishops neared the gate
|
| And the desperate King called to his knights
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| «It's your lives or the State»
|
| When the anxious King began to fail
|
| As many thought he might
|
| The Queen ran screaming round the walls
|
| And urged the men to fight
|
| The Bishops' men were tiring
|
| As the afternoon drew late
|
| And the King’s men lowered the drawbridge
|
| And poured out through the gate
|
| They fought their way across the bridge
|
| The men like falling leaves
|
| Or ears of corn that fall in swathes
|
| The vicious sickle cleaves
|
| The tide receded up the hill
|
| The waste of reclaimed land
|
| Once decaying swamp became
|
| A shore of pure white sand
|
| A blinded priest was seen to bless
|
| Both dying and the dead
|
| As he stumbled around the battlefield
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| His cassock running red
|
| If uniform were black or white
|
| His eyes could never see
|
| And death made no distinction
|
| Whatever man he be
|
| As darkness fell both camps withdrew
|
| Their soldiers slain like cattle
|
| Leaving the rooks to feast alone
|
| The victors of the battle
|
| At evensong both camps reviewed
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| Their sad depleted ranks
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| As survivors of the battle
|
| Gave God their grateful thanks |