Thick As A Brick part two - Ian Anderson

    LATER.
    See there! A man born and we pronounce him fit for peace.
    There's a load lifted from his shoulders with the discovery of his disease.
    We'll take the child from him
    put it to the test
    teach it to be a wise man
    how to fool the rest.

    QUOTE
    We will be geared to the average rather than the exceptional
    God is an overwhelming responsibility
    we walked through the maternity ward and saw 218 babies wearing nylons
    cats are on the upgrade
    upgrade? Hipgrave. Oh, Mac.


    LATER
    In the clear white circles of morning wonder,
    I take my place with the lord of the hills.
    And the blue-eyed soldiers stand slightly discoloured
    (in neat little rows) sporting canvas frills.
    With their jock-straps pinching, they slouch to attention,
    while queueing for sarnies at the office canteen.
    Saying: "How's your granny?" and good old Ernie:
    he coughed up a tenner on a premium bond win.
    The legends (worded in
    the ancient tribal hymn)
    lie cradled in the seagull's call.
    And all the promises they made are ground beneath the sadist's fall.
    The poet and the wise man stand behind the gun,
    and signal for the crack of dawn.
    Light the sun. Light the sun.
    Do you believe in the day?
    Do you? Believe in the day!
    The Dawn Creation of the Kings has begun.
    Soft Venus (lonely maiden) brings the ageless one.
    Do you believe in the day?
    The fading hero has returned to the night
    and fully pregnant with the day,
    wise men endorse the poet's sight.
    Do you believe in the day?
    Do you? Believe in the day!


    Let me tell you the tales of your life
    of your love and the cut of the knife
    the tireless oppression, the wisdom instilled
    the desire to kill or be killed.
    Let me sing of the losers who lie
    in the street as the last bus goes by.
    The pavements ar empty: the gutters run red
    while the fool toasts his god in the sky.

    So come all ye young men who are building castles!
    Kindly state the time of the year
    and join your voices in a hellish chorus.
    Mark the precise nature of your fear.
    Let me help you pick up your dead
    as the sins of the father are fed
    with the blood of the fools
    and the thoughts of the wise and
    from the pan under your bed.
    Let me make you a present of song
    as the wise man breaks wind and is gone
    while the fool with the hour-glass is cooking his goose
    and the nursery rhyme winds along.

    So! Come all ye young men who are building castles!
    Kindly state the time of the year
    and join your voices in a hellish chorus.
    Mark the precise nature of your fear.
    See! The summer lightning casts its bolts upon you
    and the hour of judgement draweth near.
    Would you be the fool stood in his suit of armour
    or the wiser man who rushes clear.

    So! Come on ye childhood heroes!
    Won't your rise up from the pages of your comic-books
    your super-crooks
    and show us all the way.
    Well! Make your will and testament.
    Won't you? Join your local government.
    We'll have Superman for president
    let Robin save the day.

    So! Where the hell was Biggles when you needed him last Saturday?
    And where were all the sportsmen who always pulled you through?
    They're all resting down in Cornwall writing up their memoirs
    for a paper-back edition of the Boy Scout Manual.
    OF COURSE
    So you ride yourselves over the fields
    and you make all your animal deals
    and your wise men don't know how it feels
    to be thick as a brick.
    Disk

    Marco Giunco
    Work Basket Music Words