Lyrics Broadford Bazaar - Jethro Tull
Dirty
white
caravans
down
our
road,
sailing.
Vivas,
Cortinas,
weaving
in
their
wake.
With
hot,
red-faced
drivers,
horns
flattened,
fists
whaling,
Putting
trust
in
blind
corners
as
they
overtake.
And
it's
All
come
willing
now,
Spend
a
shilling
now,
Stack
up
the
back
of
your
new
motor-car.
There's
home-dyed
woolens,
and
wee
plastic
(Cuillins)
(Blessed?)
(Cuchulains?)
(Cuchulain
==
mythical
Irish
hero
---
wee
plastic
Cuchulains?)
(Jo-l@kcbbs.gen.nz
(jo
lobb)
explains:
Broadford
is
a
town
on
Skye
(where
the
road
that
passes
Dun
Ringill
leaves
the
main
Road,
incidentally)
and
Skye's
famous
Cuillin
Hills
are
nearby.
I
suppose
tourists
could
be
expected
to
buy
wee
plastic
models
Of
spectacular
hills
...
Also,
the
Cuillin
Hills
are
also
Known
as
the
Coolins
or
Cuchullins,
possibly
after
an
Ossianic
Hero...,
so
maybe
wee
plastic
model
heroes
do
make
sense,
after
All.)
The
day
of
the
Broadford
Bazaar.
Out
of
the
north,
no
oil-rigs
are
drifting.
And
jobs
for
the
many
are
down
to
the
few.
Blue-bottle
choppers,
they
visit
no
longer.
Like
flies
to
the
jampots,
they
were
just
passing
through.
And
it's
All
come
willing
now,
Spend
a
shilling
now,
Stack
up
the
back
of
your
new
motor-car
Where
once
stood
oil-rigs
so
phallic
There's
only
swear-words
in
Gaelic
To
say
at
the
Broadford
bazaar.
All
kinds
of
people
come
down
for
the
opening.
Crofters
and
cottiers,
white
(wild?)
settlers
galore.
(Crofter
==
farmer
renting
land)
(Cottier
==
farmer
renting
land)
And
up
on
the
hill,
there's
an
old
sheep
that's
dying,
But
it
had
two
new
lambs
born
just
a
fortnight
before.
And
it's
All
come
willing
now,
Spend
a
shilling
now,
Stack
up
the
back
of
your
new
motor-car.
We'll
take
pounds,
francs
and
dollars
from
the
well-heeled,
And
stamps
from
the
Green
Shield.
The
day
of
the
Broadford
Bazaar.
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