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Sing a Song of Europe -- Anonymous

Guest poem sent in by Priscilla Jebaraj
(Poem #1917) Sing a Song of Europe
 Sing a song of Europe, highly civilized,
 Four and twenty nations wholly hypnotised,
 When the battle opens, the bullets start to sing -
 Isn't it a silly way to act for any King?

 The Kings are in the background, issuing commands,
 The Queens are in the parlours, per etiquette's demand;
 The bankers in the country house are busy multiplying
 The common people at the front are doing all the dying.
-- Anonymous
In the comments on the last poem, Vivian had said, "Like many folk songs,
this is a kind of oral poetry that gives license to its 'users' to invent
verses and variations of their own." I immediately remembered a variation on
Sing a Song of Sixpence that a former classmate and current Minstrels member
Amulya Gopalakrishnan used to quote. As far as I remember, it was about the
confusion of the European Union. Or was it the Common Market?

I couldn't find it on the net (Amu, if you're reading this, do send the
lyrics you used to sing), but I did find this earlier parody, apparently
Australian in origin. It was published in a 1928 edition of The Iron Worker,
a newspaper of the NSW, a branch of Federated Ironworkers Association. It
refers, I would guess, to World War I. But since the War to End All Wars
didn't quite succeed in that, don't you think the meaning is applicable to
any modern war as well?

Priscilla

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