The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 24.12.1943, Síða 1

The White Falcon - 24.12.1943, Síða 1
Vol. V. ICELAND, Friday, December 24, m3. No. U. Christmas Thoughts ’Twas the night before Christmas and the air was still. The moon’s ray glistened from a snow-capped hill. A barbed wire fence my post did enclose, And the frost of Iceland played tricks with my nose. ★ The shadows of huts loomed large ’gainst the white, While smoke from chimneys blended into the night. ’Twas a night for the soul, standing there... .alone, But the vision is lost when the heart is at home. ★ My thoughts traveled backward ’mid tinseled trees, Filled stockings and toys, and things such as these, Then I’d take my weary step up anew And shake from my mind the things I once knew. Someone’s path lay before me so clear in the snow And I tried to match footprints so no one would know. * But the mind is a thing that you can’t put aside — It echoes of passions, laying deep down inside. The reason you’re walking in far lands tonight; The reason you’re lonely and ready to fight. It tells of your mother, your sweetheart or wife— For their hopes and fears, you’d lay down your life. ★ Then a snowflake falls and it’s followed by friends, It’s hard to see where the path starts or ends. But of these things I no longer care, For Angels are singing— There’s Peace in the air. T/5 Charles S. Hess. General Key: TO: The Officers, Nurses, Enlisted Men, Civilian Employees of the United States Army Forces, and the Red Cross personnneL ★ ★ ★ As the Christmas Season approaches, we can look back on a momentous year which saw the United Nations advance in conclusive strides toward victory. Troops in Iceland contributed to that progress by their spirit and thorough- ness in performing duties in many respects more exacting than actual combat on the battlefields. You are to be commended for your perse- verance and cheerful cooperation in brushing aside the hardships and privations of Arctic service. Despite the severity of weather and endless hours of employment, you have accom- plished the misson assigned you—keeping the sea lanes in the North Atlantic open to Allied shipping in the face of stiffening enemy U-boat activity. Now we must gird our resources for another year, perhaps the decisive one which will re- turn us victoriously to our families and friends. That, of course, is a matter of conjecture, but we must maintain our vigilance without falter- ing. The Iceland Base Command’s motto, "Al- ways Alert,’’ typifies the task before us. I wish you one and all a Happy Christmas and a season of good cheer for you and your loved ones at home. As the New Year looms ahead I express the fervent hope which burns in the heart of every American; that it may bring an end to hostilities and an opportunity for peoples everywhere to live in peace with- out fear of aggression or persecution. WM. S. KEY, Major General, U.S. Army Commanding IBC.

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The White Falcon

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