The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #169131 Message #4087628
Posted By: Charley Noble
12-Jan-21 - 11:13 AM
Thread Name: Song Challenge: Those Gallant Red-Hats
Subject: RE: Song Challenge: Those Gallant Red-Hats
I'm thinking that the phrase "Opening up the Gates of Hell" resonates.
My mother once had a song she was working on but never finished titled "The Four Horsemen." It still gives me chills.
They tell me in the morning, When the horses come out the door, They'll be standing there a-waiting, To see the generals they been fighting for.
First come a rider on a red horse, His armor shining in the sun, A flaming sword in his hand, His helmet a Gatling-gun – The face of War.
Under his horse's hoofs, The dead and dying, Trampled in the sand, Bodies torn by grenades, Shattered by shrapnel, Rot in no man’s land – But with visions of victory in their eyes.
Refrain:
And I hear a voice a-crying, “Is that the general we been fighting for?” And I hear a voice answer, “Yes, that's the general you been fighting for.”
Next come a rider on a black horse, His body all covered with sores, Reeking of gangrene, From his nose and ears blood pours – The face of Pestilence.
Under his horse's hoofs, The sick and the dying, People too weak to crawl, Bodies wracked with pain, Vomiting black blood, For mercy they do call – The madness of fever in their eyes.
Refrain:
Then, out come a rider on a white horse, His body all covered with flies, Thin and gaunt and haggard, Rotting teeth and bloodshot eyes – The face of Famine.
Under his horse's hoofs, Children with swollen bellies, Pipestem arms and legs; Across the blackened fields, Mothers with outstretched hands, For bread and water beg – The madness of starvation in their eyes.
Refrain:
At last, come a rider on a pale horse, His body but a rack of bone, Slashing a scythe left and right, Eyes like balls of fire in a head of stone – The face of Death.
And under his horse's hoofs, Desolation and destruction, On the face of the earth; Gravestones and dry bones crackling, Black ashes swept up in the wind, None left to mourn or curse – The madness of another great victory.
Refrain:
And I hear a voice a-crying, “Is that the general we been fighting for?” And I hear another voice answer, “Yes, that's the general you been fighting for.”
"Oh, Lord, let me go! I can't make war no more; Oh, Lord, let me go home in peace! I seen the generals we been fighting for."