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