| The lady’s adrift in a foreign land
|
| Singing on issues both humble and grand
|
| A decade flew past her and there on the page
|
| She read that the prince had returned to the stage
|
| Hovering near treacherous waters
|
| A friend saw her drifting and caught her
|
| Unguarded fantasies flying too far
|
| Memories tumbling like sweets from a jar
|
| And take me down to the harbor now
|
| Grapes of the summer are low on the bough
|
| Ghosts of my history will follow me there
|
| And the winds of the old days will blow through my hair
|
| Breath on an undying ember
|
| It doesn’t take much to remember
|
| Those eloquent songs from the good old days
|
| That set us to marching with banners ablaze
|
| But reporters, there’s no sense in prying
|
| Our blue-eyed son’s been denying
|
| The truths that are wrapped in a mystery
|
| The sixties are over so set him free
|
| And take me down to the harbor now
|
| Grapes of the summer are low on the bough
|
| Ghosts of my history will follow me there
|
| And the winds of the old days will blow through my hair
|
| Why do I sit the autumnal judge
|
| Years of self-righteousness will not budge
|
| Singer or savior, it was his to choose
|
| Which of us knows what was his to lose
|
| Because idols are best when they’re made of stone
|
| A savior’s a nuisance to live with at home
|
| Stars often fall, heroes go unsung
|
| And martyrs most certainly die too young
|
| So thank you for writing the best songs
|
| Thank you for righting a few wrongs
|
| You’re a savage gift on a wayward bus
|
| But you stepped down and you sang to us
|
| And get you down to the harbor now
|
| Most of the sour grapes are gone from the bough
|
| Ghosts of Johanna will visit you there
|
| And the winds of the old days will blow through your hair |