paroles de chanson On the 4th of July - James Taylor
Shall
I
tell
it
again
how
we
started
as
friends
Who
would
run
into
one
another
now
and
again.
At
the
Yippee
Cai
O
or
the
Mesa
Dupree,
or
a
dozen
different
everyday
places
to
be.
I
was
living
alone,
we
were
ever
so
brave
on
the
telephone.
Would
you
care
to
come
down
for
fireworks
time,
We
could
each
just
reach,
we
step
out
of
line.
And
the
smell
of
the
smoke
and
the
lay
of
the
land
And
the
feeling
of
finding
one′s
heart
in
one's
hand
And
the
tiny
tin
voice
of
the
radio
band
singing
"love
must
stand,"
Love
forever
and
ever
must
stand.
Unbelievable
you,
impossible
me,
the
fool
who
fell
out
of
the
family
tree,
The
fellow
that
found
the
philosopher′s
stone,
deep
underground
like
a
dinosaur
bone.
Who
fell
into
you
at
a
quarter
to
two
with
a
tear
in
your
eye
for
the
Fourth
of
July
For
the
patriots
and
the
minutemen
and
the
things
you
believe
they
believed
in
then
Such
as
freedom,
and
freedom's
land
and
the
kingdom
of
God
and
the
rights
of
man
With
the
tiny
tin
voice
of
the
radio
band
singing
"love
must
stand,"
Love
forever
and
ever
must
stand
and
forever
must
stand.
Oh,
the
smell
of
the
smoke
as
we
lay
on
the
land
And
the
feeling
of
finding
my
heart
in
my
hand
With
the
tiny
tin
voice
of
the
radio
band
singing
"love
must
stand,"
Love
forever
and
ever
must
stand
and
forever
must
stand.
All
on
the
Fourth
of
July,
on
the
Fourth
of
July.
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