Goodbye, France

"Goodbye, France"
Song by the Peerless Quartet
Published 1918
Released January 1919
Songwriter(s) Irving Berlin

Goodbye, France is a World War I era song written and composed by Irving Berlin and published by Waterson, Berlin & Snyder Co.

Reception

Goodbye, France was released by The Peerless Quartet in January 1919. The song peaked at 9th on song charts in the US.[1]

Lyrics

1st Verse:

I can picture the boys 'over there,'
Making plenty of noise 'over there,'
And if I'm not wrong,
It won't be long,
Ere a certain song will fill the air;
It's all very clear,
The time's drawing near
When they'll be marching down to the pier,
singing:

Chorus:

Goodbye, France,
We'd love to linger longer,
But we must go home.
Folks are waiting to welcome us
Across the foam;
We were glad to stand side by side with you,
Mightily proud to have died with you.
So goodbye, France,
You'll never be forgotten by the U.S.A.

2nd Verse:

Goodbye, France,
They are waiting for one happy day,
When the word comes to start on their way;
With a tear-dimmed eye
They'll say goodbye,
But their hearts will cry hip-hip hooray!
The friends that they made
Will wish that they stayed,
As they start on their homeward parade, singing

'Chorus

References

  1. musicvf.com
  • Audio file of Goodbye, France "Goodbye, France". Library of Congress. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.