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                    We Will Remember Them 
                
                    By George Luck DSM 
                
                    When Britain seeks to carve it's name on History's bloodstained roll; 
                    It can point with pride to its submarines "Dear God" you took your toll. 
                    It was said they were damned un-English a weapon to be abhorred. 
                    But in a world where you fight for your freedom that's a view you just can't afford. 
                    So in trying to balance life's budget when we sit down and add up the cost. 
                    High up on the list is the price we paid; the eighty two boats that we lost. 
                     
                     
                    The first on the roll was the "Oxley" then "Seahorse" "Undine" and Starfish" 
                    "Thistle", "'Tarpon" and "Sterlet," then "Unity" and "Seal" was God's wish. 
                    One after the other went, “Odin" then “Grampus" "Orpheus" and "Shark 
                    The "Salmon" the "Phoenix" and then came the "Thames" no wonder the future looked
                    dark 
                    The "Narwhal" the "Oswald" and "Spearfish" and little "H49" too 
                    The "Rainbow", "'Triad" and "Swordfish" our country was paying it's due
                     
                    "Regulus", "'Triton", "Snapper" and "Usk", "Undaunted", "Umpire" as well 
                    "Union", "Cachalot.", "P33" all sailing their own road to hell. 
                     
                     
                    We lost "P32" and the “Tetrarch” the “Perseus” and “P31” 
                    "The "Triumph", the “Tempest" and “P38" and sadly the list just goes on
                     
                    There was “P39” and "P36" “Pandora" and "Upholder" too" 
                    “Urge", "Olympus" and "P514", ."Thorn" and “Talisman" long overdue
                     
                    "Unique", "Unbeaten" and "Utmost." then the turn of “P222"
                     
                    "Traveller", "P48" and "P311" Lord is this what you want us - to do? 
                     
                     
                    Then came "Vandal", "Tigris", "Thunderbolt.", "Turbulent.", "Regent." as well 
                    With "P615” "Splendid", and “Sahib” all bowing to fates awesome knell. 
                     
                     
                    The "Untamed", the "Parthian" and "Saracen" then X-Crafts "9", "8" and "5"
                     
                    Followed by "6" then "7" then "10" yes Lord they'd done their last dive 
                    "Usurper" the "Trooper" the next was "Simoon", "X22" also was lost. 
                    And the Ex-German "Graph" then made her last dive we earned freedom at a terrible
                    cost 
                    "Stonehenge", "Sirtis" and "Sickle" Please God! just how many more? 
                    Then "Stratagem" went to her resting place on that far distant hostile shore. 
                    
  
                    And so we near the end of the roll our White Ensign proud at Half Mast 
                    Right to the end our submarines paid for the "Porpoise" was the last. 
                    Each year we gather at Fort Blockhouse and ask that their memories be blessed 
                    For we stand proud and tall as old comrades with those dolphins pinned on our chests. 
                    
  
                    So we who survived now pray to our God "Let our boys grow up to be men" 
                    If we paid the price unflinchingly Dear Lord don't ask them to pay it again. 
                     
                     
                    George Luck DSM
                     
                     
                 
                
                    Editors note:  This poem was contrubuted by RN submariner
                        Peter (Pedro) Dickenson who told me the late Mr. Luck was a WWII RN submariner and
                        had earned the Distringuished Service Medal.  Peter said the 82 boats lost
                        named in the poem are mentioned in chonological order of their loss.  The poem
                        is read each year at St. Nicholas' Church - an 812 year old sailor's church in Liverpool
                        - during the annual Submariner's Memorial Service. 
                
                      
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