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								| Mine Fair Love �tis Gone |  |  |  
					| Mine fair love fallen, hast from mine side gone. Oh sing thee now, thy sad and mournful song.
 Grieve ye now, sad and mournful, for love so true
 Passed on now into war's grave blackened hue.
 Oh sing thee now of tragic wrong
 Oh sing of greater love for forever I'll long.
 
 Hear thee the depth of mine saddened soul ring
 A funeral dirge, to mine loves sweetest death sing.
 Sing to lost love, fallen far, far away,
 For whose tempest tossed soul, I can but now pray
 Cursing now, that most dreadful beast
 That ogre mine love rode to this killing feast.
 
 Duty left him moldering under alien ground
 Now silent in peace, soft, nary a sound.
 Oh where again can I wearily start
 Born death of hope, of very heart
 For mine love �tis gone, mine life
 Lost he for whom I sang life's sweetest songs rife.
 
 We planned the rest of our lives in love's grand wealth
 Before war came stealing with calculating stealth
 Before fated death
 Sprouted its carnally, evil breath
 Killing the source from whence very life doth spring
 Morbid despair forever to bring.
 
 War bears naught but cold-hearted fruits of death
 Sprouting fire and tempests carnally, evil breath
 O'er love lost far beyond where setting sun gathers
 Upon a nation's lovers, brothers, sons, fathers
 Killing the source from whence very life doth spring
 Morbid despair forever and a day to bring.
 
 Now mine sweet love fallen, forever from mine side gone.
 Oh sing thee now, thy sad and mournful song.
 Having destroyed asunder what might have been...
 Should have been...
 If it had not been...
 For the inhumanity of men to men.
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					| By 
					Gary Jacobson Copyright 2003
 Listed 
					August 28, 2010
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								About 
								Author... 
								In 1966-67, Gary Jacobson served with B Co 
								2nd/7th 1st Air Cavalry in Vietnam as a combat 
								infantryman and is the recipient of the Purple 
								Heart.
 Gary, who resides in Idaho writes stories he 
								hopes are never forgotten, perhaps compelled by 
								a Vietnamese legend that says, "All poets are 
								full of silver threads that rise inside them as 
								the moon grows large." So Gary says he 
								writes because "It is that these silver 
								threads are words poking at me � I must let them 
								out. I must! I write for my brothers who cannot 
								bear to talk of what they've seen and to educate 
								those who haven't the foggiest idea about the 
								effect that the horrors of war have on 
								boys-next-door."
 
					
					Visit Gary Jacobson's site for more information It is illegal to 
					use this poem without the author's permission.~~ Send your comments and/or use permission request to 
				
					Gary Jacobson. ~~
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