Song | Four Pails |
Artist | Peter Hammill |
Album | Room Temperature |
Download | Image LRC TXT |
Four pails of water and a bagfull of salts. | |
That is all we are, that is all a man comprises, | |
chemicals alone, with no spirit, soul or ghost – | |
nothing so bizarre. | |
No amount of faith disguises | |
what is true is what we fear the most. | |
Nothing can survive save the things men leave behind them. | |
Any other case would be really too absurd – | |
if thoughts remained alive | |
surely modern science would find them? | |
No, the soul is nothing but a word. | |
All the wonders Man achieves emerge from cerebral tissue. | |
Chemical reactions' ebb and surge form that Thing that is you... | |
It's a sad philosophy, but better sad than wrong. | |
Face the truth instead: | |
when you're dead you're dead, | |
when you're gone you're gone... | |
now she's gone. | |
Four pails of water and a bagfull of salts. | |
That is all she was, all my lover represented – | |
that sounds just as mad as saying she will never die. | |
Fools may clutch at straws | |
but truth must not be circumvented: | |
as the tree falls, so must that tree lie! | |
Now that sounds so odd... | |
once I would have preached it brightly. | |
Now questions appear I rationally can't ignore... | |
Nothingness or God, | |
Which of them seems more unlikely? | |
Once I would have answered clearly, | |
now I only think I'm nearly sure. | |
Once I would have answered clearly, | |
now I only think I'm nearly sure. |
Four pails of water and a bagfull of salts. | |
That is all we are, that is all a man comprises, | |
chemicals alone, with no spirit, soul or ghost | |
nothing so bizarre. | |
No amount of faith disguises | |
what is true is what we fear the most. | |
Nothing can survive save the things men leave behind them. | |
Any other case would be really too absurd | |
if thoughts remained alive | |
surely modern science would find them? | |
No, the soul is nothing but a word. | |
All the wonders Man achieves emerge from cerebral tissue. | |
Chemical reactions' ebb and surge form that Thing that is you... | |
It' s a sad philosophy, but better sad than wrong. | |
Face the truth instead: | |
when you' re dead you' re dead, | |
when you' re gone you' re gone... | |
now she' s gone. | |
Four pails of water and a bagfull of salts. | |
That is all she was, all my lover represented | |
that sounds just as mad as saying she will never die. | |
Fools may clutch at straws | |
but truth must not be circumvented: | |
as the tree falls, so must that tree lie! | |
Now that sounds so odd... | |
once I would have preached it brightly. | |
Now questions appear I rationally can' t ignore... | |
Nothingness or God, | |
Which of them seems more unlikely? | |
Once I would have answered clearly, | |
now I only think I' m nearly sure. | |
Once I would have answered clearly, | |
now I only think I' m nearly sure. |
Four pails of water and a bagfull of salts. | |
That is all we are, that is all a man comprises, | |
chemicals alone, with no spirit, soul or ghost | |
nothing so bizarre. | |
No amount of faith disguises | |
what is true is what we fear the most. | |
Nothing can survive save the things men leave behind them. | |
Any other case would be really too absurd | |
if thoughts remained alive | |
surely modern science would find them? | |
No, the soul is nothing but a word. | |
All the wonders Man achieves emerge from cerebral tissue. | |
Chemical reactions' ebb and surge form that Thing that is you... | |
It' s a sad philosophy, but better sad than wrong. | |
Face the truth instead: | |
when you' re dead you' re dead, | |
when you' re gone you' re gone... | |
now she' s gone. | |
Four pails of water and a bagfull of salts. | |
That is all she was, all my lover represented | |
that sounds just as mad as saying she will never die. | |
Fools may clutch at straws | |
but truth must not be circumvented: | |
as the tree falls, so must that tree lie! | |
Now that sounds so odd... | |
once I would have preached it brightly. | |
Now questions appear I rationally can' t ignore... | |
Nothingness or God, | |
Which of them seems more unlikely? | |
Once I would have answered clearly, | |
now I only think I' m nearly sure. | |
Once I would have answered clearly, | |
now I only think I' m nearly sure. |