Tale of A City - Volume II

TALE OF A CITY 82 Cherished desires) O, Germany, may you ever be glorious, as long, As the sun continues to rise each day and men offer prayers, What a number of Kings you have slain and imprisoned Leaving their council halls empty. I conclude my poem as I began, with Events of time are revealed to us this Year. Getting more heated up, Abdulaziz bin Saif al-Madfa’ responded with his poem entitled “Two flies whose destruction God has willed” in which he said: Previous wars clearly show, That defeats with the Germans go. Previous battles in Paris also show the sane, And today’s battles are comparable with them. Don’t be misled by the present advance, as you will see, Their retreat with heavy losses, poor beggars, will be. They will return stupefied and without a guide, These mad and brainless beasts. They will return, defeated towards their dwelling, Berlin , the home of the unholy. They will regret their losses Their inventions and the wealth they hoarded The war kept the in destructive isolation, They complain and bitterly weep of starvation. The Great Power, mustered her forces, In innumerable lacs and millions. They are enroute to Berlin to crush the Germans, And to leave no trace of them in this world. Hitler the «Hirr» (cat) and the Signor, his vassal, Are the two accursed tail-lass dogs. Mussolini may God crush his energy, Met with losses at the start of his war.

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