Down the Mine
Song by Trumpeter Arthur Smith
Gunner, 155th Field Regiment, RA.
(Fepow)
`Kinkaseki´ POW Camp Taiwan 1942

There's a song in old Formosa that the Nips they loudly sing,
In the billets every evening you should hear the music ring,
Now they sing to British soldiers who have travelled from afar,
To fight for king and country, now they´re prisoners of war,
But they know they'll see their homeland in the future once again,
Listen, while I sing to you the Nipponese refrain.

Chorus:
Down the mine bonnie laddies down the mine you'll go,
Though your feet are lacerated you dare not answer no,
Though the rice is insufficient and we treat you all like swines,
Down the mine bonnie laddies down the mine.

Now the boys were fairly happy till one cold and cloudy day,
When the 'Bunsho dono' he came out and he to them did say,
Now cxpcct you all are wondering why you're out on this parade,
The reason is, you must be taught, the Taiwan serenade.

Chorus:
Down the mine bonnie laddies down the mine you'll go,
Though your feet are lacerated you dare not answer no,
Though the rice is insufficient and we treat you all like swines,
Down the mine bonnie laddies down the mine.

You should see us work with 'chunkles' and we work with baskets too
Though the method is old-fashioned to the boys its something new,
And we'll work away with patience till the dawn of freedom's day,
But until then the Nippon men will all be heard to say.

Chorus:
Down the mine bonnie laddies down the mine you'll go,
Though your feet are lacerated you dare not answer no,
Though the rice is insufficient and we treat you all like swines,
Down the mine bonnie laddies down the mine.

 

Notes:
*bunsho dono 'camp commander'
*chunkles 'a sort of pick or mattock'

The song was composed by one of the prisoners, Trumpeter Arthur Smith, known as the "Robbie Burns of Kinkaseki". It is sung on the tape ("What A Lovely War" VT121, Veteran Tapes, 1990) by Maurice Rooney of Norwich who was also a POW at Kinkaseki, and the text is given in Roy Palmer's book. Sadly both Maurice Rooney and Arthur Smith have recently passed away, but Maurice Rooney was very active in the Former Eastern POW association, and passed on his experiences to others, and thanks to the resources of the internet it is possible to read a great deal about the stories behind this song.

The British Library Board acknowledges the intellectual property rights of those named as contributors to this recording and the rights of those not identified.
Duration: 00:03:22
Shelf mark: 1CDR0010580 (copy of C1023/88)
Recording date: 1986
Collection: Roy Palmer collection
Recording locations: Mr Rooney's home, Norwich, Norfolk, England, UK
Performers: Rooney, Maurice (singer, male)
Recordists: Rooney, Maurice
Description:
Item notes: Song composed by POWs at Kinkaseki camp in Taiwan. First line: "There's a song in old Formosa that the Nips they loudly sing". Performer notes: Ex-POW at Kinkaseki camp in Taiwan (formerly Formosa), 1942-1945. Recording notes: Second generation copy of recording made by Maurice Rooney himself

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Roy Palmer (Author)
What a Lovely War
British Soldiers' Songs from the Boer War to the Present Day

Lyn Macdonald (Foreword)
Michael Joseph Ltd (15 Oct 1990)
ISBN-13: 978-0718133573
240 pages