The year was 1872
When Florence Smith was born
Her father working in the fields
To gather in the corn
And as she lay inside her crib
She fretted and she cried
Too young to know or comprehend
Her mother sadly died
Her father could not raise a child
He knew she had to go
To auntie Jane in Calverton
Who raised poor little Flo
At age fifteen she met a man
Whilst at the village fete
Young Alfred Dingwall was his name
Who walked her to the gate
The courtship was a happy time
That cannot be denied
At age eighteen a radiant Flo
Became his blushing bride
Now Alfred was a coal miner
Entitled to a house
And so he could provide a home
For Flo his happy spouse
In just two years a girl was born
Her short life full of pain
At just three months she passed away
Eliza was her name
When John was born in ’96
Flo knew right from the start
That he would grow to be a man
To capture every heart
For two whole years the baby was
The apple of her eye
He grew to be a happy child
Not often heard to cry
On 3rd of August 1910
Her second son arrived
They say it was a miracle
How David had survived
As time went by and summers passed
The closer they became
But gathering storms in Europe meant
They’d never be the same
Aged 18 and in his prime
John signed to join the War
Poor Flo shed tears of pride and fear
’Til she could cry no more
Two years passed and John stayed safe
Then suddenly was gone
He fell with thousands on that day
At the Battle of The Somme
First her daughter now her son
Both taken from her hand
Poor Flo and Alfred could not take
This blow that fate had planned
Their second son tried very hard
To fill the gap John left
But he and Alfred could not stop
Flo feeling so bereft
As 1918 came and went
The Great War had been won
Yet still the ache in Flo’s sad heart
Persisted for her son
Alfred now was made the boss
His reputation grown
Their new found wealth soon brought them life
That they had never known
Then Flo soon found contentment in
Her need to help the poor
But all too soon came rumblings of
Another crushing war
So it was their second son
Joined up to fight the foe
With aching hearts and nervous smiles
They watched their last boy go
It came too soon, the fateful news
Of how he’d not returned
And how his fellow airmen saw
His plane had crashed and burned
The shocking news had numbed them both
And Flo would not regain
Her zest for life and Alfred knew
She’d never be the same
They lived the last years of their lives
With no joy in their heart
Not speaking once of two great wars
That tore them both apart
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