Leningrad

July 31, 1991
Issue 

Leningrad

em = By Rosemary Evans

They starved and died in Leningrad,

In darkness and in snow.

They starved and died in Leningrad

Fifty years ago.
They had no water, but each day

A little crust of bread.

And often it was hard to tell

The living from the dead.
The Germans rained bombs from the skies,

Dead bodies filled the city.

There was no wood for coffins, and

There was no room for pity.
The men all to the war had gone,

Remained the young and old

To face the cruel bombardment

In the dark and bitter cold.
Schoolchildren then died at their desks,

Old people in the snow.

Those left ate dogs and cats and rats,

Fifty years ago.
In brave and battered Leningrad

(No army to defend her),

There was no talk of yielding; there

Was no talk of surrender.
And two years of nightmare blockade

Was Leningrad's great story.

Heroic City it was named —

Shall we deny its glory?
Lest we forget, lest we forget,

Just keep the name we know

Of brave courageous Leningrad

Fifty years ago.

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