| Got an angel on the stairs
|
| As if you’d even care
|
| When the lights are up
|
| And the sun had nearly gone down
|
| Did you see him on the street?
|
| Did you pass him at your feet?
|
| Did you think at all, «How dare they even look me in the eye»?
|
| And he loves the girls
|
| And he loves the boys
|
| Going to make twenty dollars
|
| Before the weekends over
|
| So set him up
|
| To let him fall
|
| Turn him over in your hands
|
| God save the King of New Orleans
|
| Got a ticket to a show
|
| Going to see him take a blow
|
| When the drunk one said
|
| «Cat Stevens was the greatest singer!»
|
| And did you kick him in the head?
|
| Did you see the blood run down?
|
| Did you laugh at all, when the people walked right by and said aloud
|
| «Gutter punks are all the same
|
| Probably make twenty dollars 'fore the weekends over?»
|
| So set him up
|
| Then let him fall
|
| Turn him over in your hands
|
| God save the King of New Orleans
|
| Set him up
|
| Then let him fall
|
| Turn him over in your hands
|
| God save the King of New Orleans
|
| Radio in my head
|
| Radio in that car
|
| Going down again
|
| He’s going down again
|
| Anyway you look
|
| Anyway you talk it over
|
| It’s easier
|
| To let it slip out of your mind
|
| But it rips your heart out
|
| Then it kicks your head in
|
| Just give him one more chance
|
| Try to see the beauty in his world
|
| All the way in on my hands in on my feet and shoulders
|
| Going to make twenty dollars before the weekends over
|
| So set him up
|
| Then let him fall
|
| Turn him over in your hands
|
| God save the King of New Orleans
|
| Set him up
|
| Then let him fall
|
| Turn him over in your hands
|
| God save the King of all New Orleans
|
| God save the King of New Orleans |