In my memory I will always see the town that I have loved so well where our school played ball by the gasyard wall and we laughed through the smoke and the smell. Going home in the rain running up the dark lane past the jail and down behind the fountain Those were happy days in so many many ways in the town I have loves so well.
In the early morning the shirt-factory horn called women from Craigeen the Moor and the Bog while the man on the dole played the mother`s role fed the children and then trained the dogs. And when times got rough there was just about enough but they saw it through without complaining for deep inside was a burning pride for the town I loved so well.
There was music there in the Derry air like a language that we could all understand I remember the day when I earned my first pay as I played in the small pick-up band. There I spent my youth and to tell you the truth I was sad to leave it all behind me for I`d learned `bout life and I`ve found me a wife in the town I loved so well.
But when I returned how my eyes have burned to see how a town could be brought ti its knees by the armered cars and the bombed-out bars and the gas that hangs on to every breathe. Now the army`s installed by that old gasyard wall and the damned barbwire gets high and higher with their tanks and their bombs, oh my god what have they done to the town I loved so well.
Now the music`s gone but I still carry on for their spirit`s been gone but never broken they will not forget for their hearts are all set on tomorrow and peace once again. For what`s done is done and what`s won is won and what`s lost is lost and gone forever I can only pray for a bright brand-new day to the town I lived so well.Teksty umieszczone na naszej stronie są własnością wytwórni, wykonawców, osób mających do nich prawa.