When I was young I use to sit in my windowsill,
and smell the foundry late at night.
I could hear the rumble of the coal cars,
I could feel my parents fight.
Then I'd watch the trees dancing in the breeze,
while the moon played Peekaboo.
Life was just a game
on Maple Avenue.
And there were bright Winter mornings and long Summer nights,
but I never knew what they meant.
There were sermons on making time and money,
but it never made a dent.
Amid the factories there were dreams to please,
though you wondered if they'd ever come true.
It was hard to escape
from Maple Avenue.
Yet, somewhere inside of me,
where no one had ever been.
Below the goodness,
and above the sin.
Was a spark of silence,
that no one ever heard.
And I'd close my eyes and follow it
and savor every word.
And even without asking
it told me what to do.
It told me son, you've gotta run,
from Maple Avenue.
Now some of us were sinners,
none of us were saints.
Some of us were ***** and dreamless,
but we had no complaints.
We'd trade it all for just a glimpse
of what we might turn into.
But money only traded money
on Maple Avenue.
I've tried to get it all back again,
but it's not like it was before.
You can't come back into the pack,
when the ***** don't know her pups no more.
It's not a small thing for a man to die happy,
it's not a hard thing to do.
That's just one little thing I've learned
from Maple Avenue.
Kansas, Iowa 1984