Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Trains, artist - Al Stewart. Album song A Piece of Yesterday - The Anthology, in the genre Поп
Date of issue: 08.10.2006
Record label: Rhino Entertainment Company
Song language: English
Trains |
In the sapling years of the post war world |
In an English market town |
I do believe we travelled in schoolboy blue |
The cap upon the crown |
Books on knee |
Our faces pressed against the dusty railway carriage panes |
As all our lives went rolling on the clicking wheels of trains |
The school years passed like eternity |
And at last were left behind |
And it seemed the city was calling me |
To see what I might find |
Almost grown, I stood before horizons made of dreams |
I think I stole a kiss or two while rolling on the clicking |
Wheels of trains |
Trains |
All our lives were a whistle stop affair |
No ties or chains |
Throwing words like fireworks in the air |
Not much remains |
A photograph in your memory |
Through the coloured lens of time |
All our lives were just a smudge of smoke against the sky |
The silver rails spread far and wide |
Through the nineteenth century |
Some straight and true, some serpentine |
From the cities to the sea |
And out of sight |
Of those who rode in style there worked the military mind |
On through the night to plot and chart the twisting paths of |
Trains |
On the day they buried Jean Juarez |
World War One broke free |
Like an angry river overflowing |
Its banks impatiently |
While mile on mile |
The soldiers filled the railway stations arteries and veins |
I see them now go laughing on the clicking wheels of trains |
Trains |
Rolling off to the front |
Across the narrow Russian gauge |
Weeks turn into months |
And the enthusiasm wanes |
Sacrifices in seas of mud, and still you don’t know why |
All their lives are just a puff of smoke against the sky |
Then came surrender, then came the peace |
Then revolution out of the east |
Then came the crash, then came the tears |
Then came the thirties, the nightmare years |
Then came the same thing over again |
Mad as the moon |
That watches over the plain |
Oh, driven insane |
But oh what kind of trains are these |
That I never saw before |
Snatching up the refugees |
From the ghettoes of the war |
To stand confused |
With all their worldly goods, beneath the watching guard’s disdain |
As young and old go rolling on the clicking wheels of trains |
And the driver only does this job |
With vodka in his coat |
And he turns around and he makes a sign |
With his hand across his throat |
For days on end |
Through sun and snow, the destination still remains the same |
For those who ride with death above the clicking wheels of trains |
Trains |
What became of the innocence |
They had in childhood games |
Painted red or blue |
When I was young they all had names |
Who’ll remember the ones who only rode in them to die |
All their lives are just a smudge of smoke against the sky |
Now forty years have come and gone |
And I’m far away from there |
And I ride the Amtrak from NewYork City |
To Philadelphia |
And there’s a man to bring you food and drink |
And sometimes passengers exchange |
A smile or two rolling on the humming wheels |
But I can’t tell you if it’s them |
Or if it’s only me |
But I believe when they look outside |
They don’t see what I see |
Over there |
Beyond the trees it seems that I can just make out the stained |
Fields of Poland calling out to all the passing trains |
Trains |
I suppose that there’s nothing |
In this life remains the same |
Everything is governed |
By the losses and the gains |
Still sometimes I get caught up in the past I can’t say why |
All our lives are just a smudge of smoke |
Or just a breath of wind against the sky |