108 fountains
02-16-2014, 09:31 AM
Glasgow
I’ve seen the dark, cramped places
And the tarnished scowling faces
Of the grimy city of Glasgow
On the dirty banks of the Clyde
Where from great smokestacks,
Black clouds blow,
And within dark corners,
Poverty and diseases hide.
Where the people know that Scotland
Is not just moors and highlands,
Lochs and dales, hills and vales,
Where few of them have ever seen a glen
Or if they have, they can’t remember when.
MacPherson from the shipyards meets
MacFadden from the mines.
They have a little ale
And retell a few old tales.
They discuss over a bite to eat
The condition of the Scottish steel industry
And the plight of the Scottish fleet.
They remember the times
When things were different;
When wherever you went
You could smell the salty brine
Instead of dust from the iron ore mines;
When you proudly belonged to your family clan;
When a man could call himself a man.
MacPherson and MacFadden say their good-byes,
Leave the inn, and go their separate ways
Heading for home where in the dark they’ll lie
Before the factory whistle sounds another day.
As MacDonald rolls the steel
Into sheets, bars, and plates,
His mind wanders northward
From the factory and the job he hates.
Northward across the River Clyde
To that fabled land on the other side.
The heather grows green near Loch Lomond,
And sheep graze openly on the hills beyond.
In the mountains are found the glens
Made merry with the music of chirping wrens.
Far in the distance a castle stands
Guarding the enchanted Scottish lands.
The sun sets peacefully behind the trees
In a leafy green and orange light.
And if you’re quiet and listen on the breeze,
You’ll hear the Lady of the Lake
Singing softly to the night.
And in the valleys and in the dales
Sing robins and doves and jays and quail.
But MacDonald doesn’t hear the melodious tunes
Because the factory whistle is sounding noon.
In the Southwest, the heather doesn’t grow,
And smoky skies cover the rainbow.
The colorful kilts are never worn,
And a lifetime sometimes seems too long
In the dark, cramped places
And the tarnished, scowling faces
Of the Grimy city of Glasgow
On the dirty banks of the Clyde.
I’ve seen the dark, cramped places
And the tarnished scowling faces
Of the grimy city of Glasgow
On the dirty banks of the Clyde
Where from great smokestacks,
Black clouds blow,
And within dark corners,
Poverty and diseases hide.
Where the people know that Scotland
Is not just moors and highlands,
Lochs and dales, hills and vales,
Where few of them have ever seen a glen
Or if they have, they can’t remember when.
MacPherson from the shipyards meets
MacFadden from the mines.
They have a little ale
And retell a few old tales.
They discuss over a bite to eat
The condition of the Scottish steel industry
And the plight of the Scottish fleet.
They remember the times
When things were different;
When wherever you went
You could smell the salty brine
Instead of dust from the iron ore mines;
When you proudly belonged to your family clan;
When a man could call himself a man.
MacPherson and MacFadden say their good-byes,
Leave the inn, and go their separate ways
Heading for home where in the dark they’ll lie
Before the factory whistle sounds another day.
As MacDonald rolls the steel
Into sheets, bars, and plates,
His mind wanders northward
From the factory and the job he hates.
Northward across the River Clyde
To that fabled land on the other side.
The heather grows green near Loch Lomond,
And sheep graze openly on the hills beyond.
In the mountains are found the glens
Made merry with the music of chirping wrens.
Far in the distance a castle stands
Guarding the enchanted Scottish lands.
The sun sets peacefully behind the trees
In a leafy green and orange light.
And if you’re quiet and listen on the breeze,
You’ll hear the Lady of the Lake
Singing softly to the night.
And in the valleys and in the dales
Sing robins and doves and jays and quail.
But MacDonald doesn’t hear the melodious tunes
Because the factory whistle is sounding noon.
In the Southwest, the heather doesn’t grow,
And smoky skies cover the rainbow.
The colorful kilts are never worn,
And a lifetime sometimes seems too long
In the dark, cramped places
And the tarnished, scowling faces
Of the Grimy city of Glasgow
On the dirty banks of the Clyde.