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NAME: George Vincent Sarto Rudge
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DATE: 1939 - 1945
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UNIT: 2/4 Field Coy RAE
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LOCATION: Tobruk
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Sapper George Vincent Sarto Rudge was one of the Rats of Tobruk. He was also a poet with an eye for detail who spent much of his spare time recording in his diaries the events in which he was involved.
He described the devastation caused by the war and the sad sight of thousands of prisoners on the roads into Tobruk. He wrote about the dreadful conditions the troops had to endure during the siege, including the shortage of drinking water, the problems with rats (the four-legged type), spiders and fleas, the dust, sand and heat and the terrible food.
But through it all he maintained a sense of humour and wrote more than a dozen poems, two of which are reproduced here. To My Mother
"A Night in the Desert"
I'm lonely tonight in the desert In vain have I tried to sleep The stars that shine above me Their silent watches keep.
And it's peaceful here in the desert With the enemy guns so still And I think of a world gone crazy By a mad dictators will.
Now the siren shrieks a warning And planes swoop overhead We scramble into our dugouts And hug the earth's cold bed.
Our guns go into action And searchlights rake the sky And with bating breath I gaze on death As I see a comrade die.
The bombs rain down with a piercing scream And burst with a deafening roar. I realise this is no dream And I curse this bloody war.
I silently murmur a fervent prayer As I kneel by the side of my pal I think of his dear old mother His sister or maybe a gal.
He gave up his all for his country So carefree young and gay And here in this lonely desert His dear life he had to pay.
But his name will go down in history On the scroll of honour at home And his soul will live forever In a hero's sacred dome.
Now the sky is clear again And the stars their watches keep, As we crawl back into our dugouts And in vain we try to sleep.
High in a tower of stillness Night spreads a jewelled hand And I earnestly yearn for my return To my Mother and Aussie land.
George Rudge Sapper NX21592
Untitled
I've seen a lot of country Since I began to roam But never yet have I ever met Folks like the folks at home.
I've been in the land so holy With the Palestinian few And refugees from Europe And the scrounging Arab too.
I've worked with many soldiers And I've been with an Etye flapper But none of the mob can do the job Like the good old Aussie Sapper.
I've travelled the land of plenty Along the Mediterranean Sea From Cairo to Benghazi And I've never seen a tree.
They call it the land of plenty Well I reckon that's a lie For the only things that are plenty Is dust and the rotten flies.
I've worked with the Pommy RE The Indian, Turk and Greek And one things got me buggered I don't know what they speak.
They yabber some bleeding lingo It would drive you mad to hear Their cognac is rotten And so is their flamin beer.
And they brag about their soldiers With a proud and lordly air They never mention Aussie But the Aussie doesn't care.
George Rudge Sapper NX 21592
The material for this article was supplied by Mrs Maureen Manahan of New South Wales
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