Album: Pagan Place
When I left my home and my family
 my mother said to me
"Son, it's not how many Germans you kill that counts
 it's how many people you set free"
So I packed my bags
 brushed my cap
Walked out into the world
 seventeen years old
Never kissed a girl
Took the train to Voronezh
 that was as far as it would go
Changed my sacks for a uniform
 bit my lip against the snow
I prayed for mother Russia
 in the summer of '43
And as we drove the Germans back
 I really believed
That God was listening to me
We howled into Berlin
 tore the smoking buildings down
Raised the red flag high
 burnt the reichstag brown
I saw my first American
 and he looked a lot like me
He had the same kinda farmer's face
 said he'd come from some place called Hazzard, Tennessee
Then the war was over
 my discharge papers came
Me and twenty hundred others
 went to Stettiner for the train
Kiev! said the commissar
 from there your own way home
But I never got to Kiev
 we never came by home
Train went north to the Taiga
 we were stripped and marched in file
Up the great siberian road
 for miles and miles and miles and miles
Dressed in stripes and tatters
 in a gulag left to die
All because Comrade Stalin was scared that
 we'd become too westernized!
Used to love my country
 used to be so young
Used to believe that life was
 the Best Song Ever sung
I would have died for my country
 in 1945
But now only one thing remains
 but now only one thing remains
But now only one thing remains
 but now only one thing remains
The brute will to survive!