paroles de chanson City Of New Orleans - The Seldom Scene
D]Riding
on
the
City
of
New
Orleans,
Illinois
Central,
Monday
morning
rail,
Fifteen
cars
and
fifteen
restless
riders,
Three
conductors,
and
twenty
five
sacks
of
mail.
We′re
all
out
on
the
southbound
odyssey,
As
the
train
pulls
out
of
Kankakee,
And
rolls
past
the
houses,
farms
and
fields.
Passing
towns
that
have
no
name,
And
freight
yards
full
of
old
black
men,
And
the
graveyards
of
rusted
automobiles.
{C:
}
Good
morning
America,
how
are
you?
Say
don't
you
know
me,
I′m
your
native
son.
I'm
the
train
they
call
the
City
of
New
Orleans,
I'll
be
gone
five
hundred
mileswhen
the
day
is
done.
Dealing
card
games
with
the
old
men
in
the
club
cars,
A
penny
a
point,
there
ain′t
no
one
keeping
score.
Won′t
you
pass
the
paper
bag
that
holds
the
bottle,
You
can
feel
the
wheels
rumbling
through
the
floor.
And
the
sons
of
Pullman
porters,
And
the
sons
of
engineers,
Ride
their
fathers'
magic
carpet
made
of
steel.
Mothers
with
their
babes
asleep,
There
rocking
to
the
gentle
beat,
And
the
rhythm
of
the
rails
is
all
they
dream.
{.}
Midnight
on
the
City
of
New
Orleans,
Changing
cars
in
Memphis,
Tennessee.
Halfway
home,
and
we′ll
be
there
by
morning,
Through
the
Mississippi
darkness,
rolling
down
to
the
sea.
Then
all
the
towns
and
people
seem
To
fade
into
a
bad
dream,
The
old
steel
rail
still
ain't
heard
the
news.
The
conductor
sings
his
songs
again,
The
passengers
will
please
refrain,
This
train′s
got
the
disappearin'
railroad
blues.
{C:
}
Singin′
Goodnight
America,
how
are
you?
Say
don't
you
know
me,
I'm
your
native
son.
I′m
the
train
they
call
the
City
of
New
Orleans,
I′ll
be
gone
five
hundred
miles
when
the
day
is
done
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