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Lights Of The Commodore Barry Lyrics

I saw the lights of the Commodore Barry
From the deck of the ghost of the Flower Street ferry
And I felt the shock of an atom bomb
When the tired old city of Chester was draped and dying in my arms

For a while I was lost under the weight of remembering
Of how the sun would warn the projects some mornings
When the birds were falling like winter's frozen rain
And I was all fingers numb, holding a brown paper lunch, twelve years old and already ashamed

Now soon I was floating over Highland Avenue
By my side was the Red Cross, the pope and the president too
Yeah I had returned like I swore I would
To right some wrongs, and sing my song, and share the luck that every man should

But when the fever broke and I awoke from the dream
I was passed out beside a jukebox siphoning gasoline
When my brother yanked me hard from the corner bar
And carried my drunk bones, all the way home, draped and heavy in his arms

Lights Of The Commodore Barry Lyrics performed by Matthew Ryan are property and copyright of the authors, artists and labels. You should note that Lights Of The Commodore Barry Lyrics performed by Matthew Ryan is only provided for educational purposes only and if you like the song you should buy the CD


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