Up to Us
Mr_Yesterday
It’s not that many pages, in a dictionary…. Dry vox flac in the downloads.
Lyrics (cc)BY 2015
—————
Well, I went to the top of the mountain, to see the wise man there.
I asked him why this world we live in is filled with [so much] sorrow and care.
And he looked me over and up and down and then he shook his head real slow….
He said, “Son, you’ve come to the wrong man. That’s one thing I [sure] don’t know.”
Well, I stayed up there on the mountain [a while] to see what I could see
and I looked out over this whole wide world in its awesome majesty.
But then my gaze fell down to the city and the fires and the smoke below,
and I shook my head and asked myself, “Now where did our garden go?”
So when I came down off of the mountain and walked back to my street
I talked with all my friends and neighbors and anyone else I’d meet
and said “I don’t know how it [all] got this way, but I know one thing for sure:
if we want it to get any better, we’re the only source of [the] cure.”
‘Cause if you climb to the top of that mountain and you speak to the wise man there,
once you ask him why this world we live in is filled with [all this] sorrow and care,
and once he looks you over and shakes his head and [he] tells you that he just don’t know
he’ll say “That’s not the important question, my friend, ask ‘How does my garden grow?’”
Now, some of us are just too busy, and a few of us just don’t care,
and some are fighting battles so hard they haven’t got anything to spare,
but if we just put our hands together and set aside our fears
the children of our children’s children might thank us in a couple of hundred years.
So go [on up] to the top of the mountain. See what you can see.
If you run into that wise old man up there, please say hello from me.
But I won’t be going with you—not in this, or any year—
‘cause everything you see needs doing up there, can only be done down here.
Lyrics (cc)BY 2015
—————
Well, I went to the top of the mountain, to see the wise man there.
I asked him why this world we live in is filled with [so much] sorrow and care.
And he looked me over and up and down and then he shook his head real slow….
He said, “Son, you’ve come to the wrong man. That’s one thing I [sure] don’t know.”
Well, I stayed up there on the mountain [a while] to see what I could see
and I looked out over this whole wide world in its awesome majesty.
But then my gaze fell down to the city and the fires and the smoke below,
and I shook my head and asked myself, “Now where did our garden go?”
So when I came down off of the mountain and walked back to my street
I talked with all my friends and neighbors and anyone else I’d meet
and said “I don’t know how it [all] got this way, but I know one thing for sure:
if we want it to get any better, we’re the only source of [the] cure.”
‘Cause if you climb to the top of that mountain and you speak to the wise man there,
once you ask him why this world we live in is filled with [all this] sorrow and care,
and once he looks you over and shakes his head and [he] tells you that he just don’t know
he’ll say “That’s not the important question, my friend, ask ‘How does my garden grow?’”
Now, some of us are just too busy, and a few of us just don’t care,
and some are fighting battles so hard they haven’t got anything to spare,
but if we just put our hands together and set aside our fears
the children of our children’s children might thank us in a couple of hundred years.
So go [on up] to the top of the mountain. See what you can see.
If you run into that wise old man up there, please say hello from me.
But I won’t be going with you—not in this, or any year—
‘cause everything you see needs doing up there, can only be done down here.