Song | Texas 1947 |
Artist | Guy Clark |
Album | The Essential Guy Clark |
Download | Image LRC TXT |
作词 : Clark | |
Now bein' six years old, | |
I had seen some trains before, so it's hard to figure out what | |
I'm at the depot for. | |
Trains are big and black and smokin' - steam screamin' at the wheels, bigger than anything they is, at least that's the way she feels | |
Trains are big and black and smokin', louder'n | |
July four, but everybody's actin' like this might be somethin' more. . . . . .than just pickin' up the mail, or the soldiers from the war. | |
This is somethin' that even old man | |
Wileman never seen before. | |
And it's late afternoon on a hot | |
Texas day. somethin' strange is goin' on, and we's all in the way. | |
Well there's fifty or sixty people they're just sittin' on their cars, and the old men left their dominos and they come down from the bars. | |
Everybody's checkin', old | |
Jack Kittrel check his watch, and us kids put our ears to the rails to hear 'em pop. | |
So we already knowed it, when they finally said 'train time' you'd a-thought that | |
Jesus Christ his-self was rollin' down the line. ' | |
Cause things got real quiet, momma jerked me back, | |
But not before | |
I'd got the chance to lay a nickel on the track. | |
Chorus Look out here she comes, she's comin', | |
Look out there she goes, she's gone, screamin' straight through | |
Texas like a mad dog cyclone. | |
Big, red, and silver, she don't make no smoke, she's a fast-rollin' streamline come to show the folks. | |
Look out here she comes, she's comin' | |
Look out there she goes, she's gone, screamin' straight through | |
Texas like a mad dog cyclone. . . . | |
Lord, she never even stopped. | |
She left fifty or sixty people still sittin' on their cars, and they're wonderin' what it's comin' to and how it got this far. | |
Oh but me | |
I got a nickel smashed flatter than a dime by a mad dog, runaway red-silver streamline. . . train | |
Chorus |
zuo ci : Clark | |
Now bein' six years old, | |
I had seen some trains before, so it' s hard to figure out what | |
I' m at the depot for. | |
Trains are big and black and smokin' steam screamin' at the wheels, bigger than anything they is, at least that' s the way she feels | |
Trains are big and black and smokin', louder' n | |
July four, but everybody' s actin' like this might be somethin' more. . . . . . than just pickin' up the mail, or the soldiers from the war. | |
This is somethin' that even old man | |
Wileman never seen before. | |
And it' s late afternoon on a hot | |
Texas day. somethin' strange is goin' on, and we' s all in the way. | |
Well there' s fifty or sixty people they' re just sittin' on their cars, and the old men left their dominos and they come down from the bars. | |
Everybody' s checkin', old | |
Jack Kittrel check his watch, and us kids put our ears to the rails to hear ' em pop. | |
So we already knowed it, when they finally said ' train time' you' d athought that | |
Jesus Christ hisself was rollin' down the line. ' | |
Cause things got real quiet, momma jerked me back, | |
But not before | |
I' d got the chance to lay a nickel on the track. | |
Chorus Look out here she comes, she' s comin', | |
Look out there she goes, she' s gone, screamin' straight through | |
Texas like a mad dog cyclone. | |
Big, red, and silver, she don' t make no smoke, she' s a fastrollin' streamline come to show the folks. | |
Look out here she comes, she' s comin' | |
Look out there she goes, she' s gone, screamin' straight through | |
Texas like a mad dog cyclone. . . . | |
Lord, she never even stopped. | |
She left fifty or sixty people still sittin' on their cars, and they' re wonderin' what it' s comin' to and how it got this far. | |
Oh but me | |
I got a nickel smashed flatter than a dime by a mad dog, runaway redsilver streamline. . . train | |
Chorus |
zuò cí : Clark | |
Now bein' six years old, | |
I had seen some trains before, so it' s hard to figure out what | |
I' m at the depot for. | |
Trains are big and black and smokin' steam screamin' at the wheels, bigger than anything they is, at least that' s the way she feels | |
Trains are big and black and smokin', louder' n | |
July four, but everybody' s actin' like this might be somethin' more. . . . . . than just pickin' up the mail, or the soldiers from the war. | |
This is somethin' that even old man | |
Wileman never seen before. | |
And it' s late afternoon on a hot | |
Texas day. somethin' strange is goin' on, and we' s all in the way. | |
Well there' s fifty or sixty people they' re just sittin' on their cars, and the old men left their dominos and they come down from the bars. | |
Everybody' s checkin', old | |
Jack Kittrel check his watch, and us kids put our ears to the rails to hear ' em pop. | |
So we already knowed it, when they finally said ' train time' you' d athought that | |
Jesus Christ hisself was rollin' down the line. ' | |
Cause things got real quiet, momma jerked me back, | |
But not before | |
I' d got the chance to lay a nickel on the track. | |
Chorus Look out here she comes, she' s comin', | |
Look out there she goes, she' s gone, screamin' straight through | |
Texas like a mad dog cyclone. | |
Big, red, and silver, she don' t make no smoke, she' s a fastrollin' streamline come to show the folks. | |
Look out here she comes, she' s comin' | |
Look out there she goes, she' s gone, screamin' straight through | |
Texas like a mad dog cyclone. . . . | |
Lord, she never even stopped. | |
She left fifty or sixty people still sittin' on their cars, and they' re wonderin' what it' s comin' to and how it got this far. | |
Oh but me | |
I got a nickel smashed flatter than a dime by a mad dog, runaway redsilver streamline. . . train | |
Chorus |