Songtexte Age of Treason - Donovan
On
a
lone
and
windy
hilltop
beneath
a
roof
of
tin
In
a
little
wallpapered
bedroom
I
done
my
growin'
'Twas
there
I
dreamt
my
dreams,
I
hung
my
jeans
And
wandered
through
my
puberty
as
all
do
My
mother
was
a
tight
nut
bound
up
with
false
guilt
Strapped
up
in
her
fearing
wall
she
had
built
The
independent
girl
in
a
dark
and
cruel
world
She'd
lost
the
way
to
say,
"OK,
now
lay
back"
We
disagreed
on
most
things,
I
shouted
peace
and
love
The
family
is
mankind,
the
symbol
of
the
dove
She
only
saw
the
surface
of
things
before
her
face
But
I
was
young
and
argued
on
for
hours
My
father
he
liked
poetry,
a
scholar
he
might
have
made
Had
nothing,
born
a
poor
boy
barefoot
and
underpaid
So
the
man
worked
with
his
hands
up
and
down
the
land
His
dreams
forgot
he
thought
that
I
must
follow
With
his
marks
as
worker's
wisdom
he'd
read
a
thing
or
two
He
once
had
been
a
Mason
but
he
never
followed
through
Always
kind
and
thoughtful,
smelling
of
mushy
oil
And
he
read
me
poetry
of
visionaries
I
flunk
my
way
to
college,
a
looser
kind
of
school
But
we
bobbed
and
played
time
arty,
feeling
cool
Just
to
live
an
artists
diggin'
the
ravin'
scene
Reading
Kerouac
and
Ginsberg
well
deuced
I
was
not
academic,
Art
and
English
neat
The
history
of
mankind
I
liked
that
a
bit
And
what
was
I
to
do?
The
choices
they
were
few
I
done
right
disgrace
to
the
working
classes
I
done
right
disgrace
to
the
working
classes
I
done
right
disgrace
to
the
working
classes
I
done
right
disgrace
to
the
working
classes
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