Interviewed by
The Sydney Morning Herald in 2002, Bogle said that as a 12-year-old boy in
Peebles,
Scotland in 1956, he had purchased a set of bound volumes of
World War Illustrated, a weekly "
penny dreadful propaganda sheet", which had been published during
World War I. Bogle was inspired by the photography and felt a sense of "...the enormity of the conflict and its individual toll". In his teens he was a voracious reader of everything on the war and already knew much about the
Anzacs' role at Gallipoli before he emigrated to Australia in 1969. Interviewed in 2009 for
The Scotsman, he said: I wrote it as an oblique comment on the
Vietnam War, which was in full swing... but while boys from Australia were dying there, people had hardly any idea where Vietnam was. Gallipoli was a lot closer to the Australian ethos – every schoolkid knew the story, so I set the song there. ... At first the
Returned Service League and all these people didn't accept it at all; they thought it was anti-soldier, but they've come full circle now and they see it's certainly anti-war but not anti-soldier. He told
The Sydney Morning Herald: A lot of people now think the song is traditional. And a lot of people think that I died in the war, and penned it in blood as I expired in the bottom of a trench. I never thought the song would outlast me, but I have decided now there's no doubt it will. For how long, I have no idea. Nothing lasts forever. Hopefully it'll be sung for quite a few years down the track, especially in this country. And hopefully it will get to the stage where everyone forgets who wrote it. to which the young Australian volunteers of Bogle's song march to war and return from war and which is played when the war is remembered. At the conclusion of Bogle's song, its melody and a few of its lyrics, with modifications, are incorporated. == Background ==