Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Tall Ships, artist - Show Of Hands. Album song Roots - The Best of Show of Hands, in the genre Музыка мира
Date of issue: 18.11.2007
Record label: Hands on
Song language: English
Tall Ships |
Give us a wreck or two, good Lord; |
Winter along this coast is hard. |
Grey frost creeps like mortal sin, |
No food in the larder, no bread in the bin. |
One rich wreck is all we pray, |
Busted abroad at break of day |
Broken and splintered upon the reef, |
Bread and wine to calm our grief. |
Lord of rocks and tide and sky, |
Heed our call, hark to our cry! |
Bread by the bag, beef by the cask, |
Food for poor hearts is all we ask. |
(Sung) |
On the skyline the tall ships sail by, |
Bound for London, their decks piled high; |
Fruits of warmer lands, |
Passing through our hands, |
So we look for the storm in the sky. |
Farewell and adieu to you, Spanish ladies, |
Farewell and adieu, you ladies of Spain; |
We’ve received orders for to sail back to England, |
We hope in a short time to see you again. |
We’ll rant and we’ll roar like true British sailors, |
We’ll rant and we’ll roar all on the salt sea. |
Until we strike soundings in the channel of old England; |
From Ushant to Scily is thirty five leagues. |
We hove our ship to with the wind from the west, boys |
Hove our ship to, deep soundings to take; |
Thirty five fathoms, and a white sandy bottom, |
We squared our main yard and the channel did make. |
We’ll rant and we’ll roar like true British sailors, |
We’ll rant and we’ll roar all on the salt sea. |
Til we strike soundings in the channel of old England; |
From Ushant to Scily is thirty five leagues. |
Oh, the fishermen rise with the sun, |
And they work 'til the day’s nearly done, |
Hauling empty nets, |
While the cold sun sets, |
And the winter is barely begun. |
There’s a lighthouse a mile from the shore, |
That the storm-weary sailors search for, |
When the wind and rain |
Bring their gales again, |
It won’t shine for them anymore. |
On the skyline the tall ships sail by, |
Bound for London, their decks piled high; |
Fruits of warmer lands, |
Passing through our hands, |
So we look for a storm in the sky. |
Sweet thoughts of home came to me today, |
Far too long now I’ve been away, |
I’ll stay away no longer, |
Come homeward winds, blow stronger. |
Stronger |
I’m home bound |
I’m home bound |
With the first clear sight of the West Country shore, |
We swear we won’t go to sea any more, |
Sweethearts and wives seem dearer, |
As the English shore draws nearer. |
Now soon their welcome will warm winter’s heart, |
We’ll vow nothing will pull us apart, |
There’ll be a short time of plenty; |
We’ll think again when our pockets are empty. |
Now a grey storm blackens the clear Western skies, |
Fear and welcome join both in our eyes, |
Full sail and a straining main mast, |
Run with the wind; |
we’ll fly while the storm lasts. |
While the storm last. |
I’m homeward bound |
I’m homeward bound |
As the rain blackened clouds gather round, |
And the roaring gales drown every sound, |
All I search the night |
For that ray of light, |
That warns where the black rocks are found. |
I know this place, I know this place |
We’re running aground, we’re running aground, we’re running aground! |
(Spoken) |
One rich wreck, or maybe two, |
Food and stores to see us through, |
Til Spring leaps up like break of day |
And fish return to the empty bay, |
One rich wreck, for thy hand is strong, |
A brig, or a merchant one from up along. |
Caught on your twisted tides, good lord, |
Drawn by our false lights to the shore. |
(Sung) |
I rose with the morning on a rain washed day, |
Early and I walked along the shore; |
Watching the broken splintered driftwood come in, |
I listened to the ocean roar. |
Town slowly waking and I walked from the sea, |
Parents break in to their children’s dreams |
Mothers start to call; |
fathers reach the stirring streets, |
Wondering what another morning brings. |
All they have to sell is the strength of two strong arms, |
All they are standing in their shoes, |
And the price of your labour in deep winter falls and falls, |
Point came there was nothing left to lose. |
We pay the price of winter, and we buy another year, |
It’s time to search the heart and count the cost, |
Take the guilty conscience, and the widow’s bitter tears, |
And what we gain is someone else’s loss. |
Yesterday the gales that shook the rooftop slates |
Today the breeze gently tugs your hair |
And the tide that closed its fist and snapped a broad ship’s back |
Now softly takes the white gulls from the air, |
Oh, the banker’s purse is like a deep black well |
For every other well bred clown, |
And the merchant has a fleetful of young men’s lives |
He can risk one in twenty going down. |
I rose with the morning on a rain washed day, |
It was early and I walked along the shore; |
I knelt down by the water where my brother lay, |
I listened to the ocean roar. |
We have families with sons on the sea, |
They work the tall ships of the sea, |
But our choice is made, |
By these winter’s days, |
And the children who watch from the quay. |
That wild evening the word flew around, |
A tall merchant mashed into the ground, |
How we shout and sing, |
Glad to greet the spring, |
Though we weep for the sailors we’ve drowned. |
On the skyline the tall ships sail by, |
Bound for London, their decks piled high; |
Fruits of warmer lands, |
Passing through our hands, |
So we look for a storm in the sky. |
November wind chills to the bone, |
And December rain lashes the stones, |
Sea that brings us life, |
Take your sacrifice, |
And give back the hope to our homes. |
On the skyline the tall ships sail by, |
Bound for London, their decks piled high; |
Fruits of warmer lands, |
Passing through our hands, |
So we look for a storm in the sky. |
Oh, the fishermen rise with the sun, |
And they work 'til the day’s nearly done, |
Hauling empty nets, |
While the cold sun sets, |
And the winter is barely begun. |
On the skyline the tall ships sail by, |
Bound for London, their decks piled high; |
Fruits of warmer lands, |
Passing through our hands, |
So we look for a storm in the sky. |
Oh, we look for a storm in the sky. |
Oh, we look for a storm in the sky. |