He was a ragged boy when at his father's knee; Became an orphan like a fledgling from a tree And at the barrack fence he found his only thrill; The sights and sounds of the parade ground And the soldiers and their drill. And the band played on and the soldiers marched along And they sang the Sweet Banana Song Nobody was there to share, to turn to and to say: "I'm gonna be a soldier too one day..." He was a ragged youth, he worked the fields of grain: A simple man of peace in sun and wind and rain And they came in the dead of night as only jackals can And they killed his woman and child And the white haired old man. And life goes on and the soldiers marched along And they sang the Sweet Banana song. Nobody was there to hear his oath of sweet revenge And the deaths he swore one day he would avenge. Far from the ragged boy the soldier that he made; No one to see him at the passing- out- parade One day, an ambush and a bullet tears his chest And dying as he fires four jackals meet their death And the war raged on and the soldiers marched along And they sang the Sweet Banana song. Nobody was there, to care, to be there by his side, Nobody was there when the ragged soldier died. Nobody was there, nobody was there Nobody was there, nobody was there...