Текст песни The Big Parade - 10,000 Maniacs
(Music:
Jerome
Augustyniak/words:
Natalie
Merchant)
Detroit
to
D.C.
night
train,
Capitol,
parts
East.
Lone
young
man
takes
a
seat.
And
by
the
rhythm
of
the
rails,
reading
all
his
mother's
mail
from
a
city
boy
in
a
jungle
town
postmarked
Saigon.
He'll
go
live
his
mother's
dream,
join
the
slowest
parade
he'll
ever
see.
Her
weight
of
sorrows
carried
long
and
carried
far.
"Take
these,
Tommy,
to
The
Wall."
Metro
line
to
the
Mall
site
with
a
tour
of
Japanese.
He's
wandering
and
lost
until
a
vet
in
worn
fatigues
takes
him
down
to
where
they
belong.
Near
a
soldier,
an
ex-Marine
with
a
tattooed
dagger
and
eagle
trembling,
he
bites
his
lip
beside
a
widow
breaking
down.
She
takes
her
Purple
Heart,
makes
a
fist,
strikes
The
Wall.
All
come
to
live
a
dream,
to
join
the
slowest
parade
they'll
ever
see.
Their
weight
of
sorrows
carried
long
and
carried
far,
taken
to
The
Wall.
It's
40
paces
to
the
year
that
he
was
slain.
His
hand's
slipping
down
The
Wall
for
it's
slick
with
rain.
How
would
life
have
ever
been
the
same
if
this
wall
had
carved
in
it
one
less
name?
But
for
Christ's
sake,
he's
been
dead
over
20
years.
He
leaves
the
letters
asking,
"Who
caused
my
mother's
tears,
was
it
Washington
or
the
Viet
Cong?"
Slow
deliberate
steps
are
involved.
He
takes
them
away
from
the
black
granite
wall
toward
the
other
monuments
so
white
and
clean.
O,
Potomac,
what
you've
seen.
Abraham
had
his
war
too,
but
an
honest
war.
Or
so
it's
taught
in
school.
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