| They didn’t ask him to leave when the bell rang,
|
| drinking whiskey much older than I am.
|
| I sat and I watched him, watching his watch
|
| and he turned round and asked me the time.
|
| The waitress wandered across from the kitchen,
|
| she was ever so slightly singing.
|
| A song he once knew,
|
| a beautiful tune.
|
| And he wished that he knew it once more.
|
| He asked me
|
| 'Where do you go, when your mind doesn’t work with your soul?
|
| I have memories made.
|
| Now I can’t put a face to a name.
|
| Do you know who I am?
|
| Where did I go?
|
| And where have I been?
|
| Do you know who I am?
|
| All that I’ve loved and all that I’ve seen seems to go.'
|
| There she sat with her tea in the garden,
|
| didn’t remember why we were arguing.
|
| the point had been lost, she forgot where it was,
|
| so she told me the story again.
|
| She had told me to look in the kitchen,
|
| she said some of her things had gone missing.
|
| They all had been stored where she kept them before.
|
| It’s was only her mind that had changed.
|
| She asked me
|
| 'Where do you go, when your mind doesn’t work with your soul?
|
| I have memories made.
|
| Now I can’t put a face to a name.
|
| Do you know who I am?
|
| Where did I go?
|
| And where have I been?
|
| Do you know who I am?
|
| All that I’ve loved and all that I’ve seen seems to go.'
|
| Every breeze running through every tree and every fallen leaf,
|
| that’s you, my friend.
|
| I know the world will change
|
| but you will know my name
|
| when I see you again.
|
| Do you know who I am?
|
| Where did I go?
|
| And where have I been?
|
| Do you know who I am?
|
| All that I’ve loved and all that I’ve seen seems to go. |