Lyrics When the Circus Came to Town - Aurelio Voltaire
Well,
the
days
are
long
And
the
work
is
hard
When
your
childhood
is
spent
in
the
fields
And
summer
seemed
to
last
million
years
One
day
when
I
was
just
a
boy
During
one
of
those
hot
summer
swells
The
locusts
were
silenced
by
the
clanging
of
bells
And
there
was
the
thing
for
which
I
longed
A
place
where
I
belonged
Where
I
first
held
the
hand
Of
the
one
I
loved
When
the
circus
came
to
town
We
ate
candy-corns
and
corn
dogs
Cotton
candy
and
candy-canes
And
we
shared
a
caramel
apple
by
the
arcade
And
when
night
fell
and
the
stars
rose
And
light
bedazzled
the
fair
We
rode
the
Ferris
wheel
Up
into
the
air
And
there
was
the
thing
for
which
I
longed
A
place
where
I
belonged
Where
I
first
held
the
hand
Of
the
one
I
loved
When
the
circus
came
to
town
And
later,
in
the
funhouse,
Our
bodies
looked
so
strange
And
the
mirrors
made
our
faces
seemed
deranged
And
the
snake-man
in
the
freak-show
He
got
you
so
alarmed
That
you
ran
and
ran
and
ran
Right
into
my
arms
Oh,
oh,
oh
The
next
morning
I
got
up
Wrapped
my
clothes
up
into
a
ball
And
I
ran
and
ran
to
run
away
with
the
fair
But
when
I
arrived,
to
my
surprise,
All
the
tents
and
wagons
were
gone
And
they′d
stolen
all
that
happiness
from
the
air
And
gone
was
the
thing
for
which
I
longed
That
place
where
I
belonged
Where
I
last
held
the
hand
of
the
one
I
loved
When
the
circus
came
When
the
circus
came
When
the
circus
came
to
town
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