| Come along in my mackinaw
|
| I’ll point you where you need to go
|
| Though our path may bend and yaw
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| You won’t get lost
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| With my pointed prow and square stern
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| We’ll use our arms for oars
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| To spoor little schools of fish
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| Make festoon-shaped grooves in the fickle waves
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| 'Til the howling wind ushers us to leave
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| Out at sea for days
|
| I sleep most afternoons away
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| And you anxiously compass us
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| 'Til we see land
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| But the land we knew
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| Was now a new landscape
|
| And the howling wind ushered us to leave
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| But you wanted a closer look
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| Then gripped to the rail, how our cheeks turned pale
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| To see the flying machines near clip the houses
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| And throw kisses to the sandbar
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| Little tendrils of smoke trailing out of the exhaust
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| In parabolic wakes, swooping low like gulls
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| Causing the town to tremor and to shake
|
| It was clear that city was nothing
|
| But an aluminium piece of junk
|
| Oh, and the howling wind ushered us to leave
|
| But we couldn’t move we stood forever changed
|
| When something ends, something has to begin
|
| When the filaments of fiber
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| From their flares caught afire
|
| Your hair looked like spark on a wire
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| I would have paid my last dollar
|
| To see you lambent like that
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| Lit by the light of ten thousand shackled suns
|
| Being hung on a thin thread
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| Sift amongst the debris for half-hearted dreams
|
| Remnants of pocket change
|
| Pretty, frilly, thrown-away things
|
| Gauze and dust and shards of glass
|
| Bricks and bended straws and greyhounds' teeth
|
| And the howling wind ushered us to leave |