Red sun go down way over dirty town
Starlings are sweeping around crazy shoals
A girl is there high heeling across the square
Wind blows around in her hair and the flaqs upon the poles
Waiting in the crowd to cross at the light
She looks around to find a face she can like

Church bell clinging on trying to get a crowd for Evensong
Nobody cares to depend to depend upon the chime it plays
They're all in the station praying for trains
Congregation late again
It's getting darker all the time these flagpole days
Drunk old soldier he gives her a fright
He's crazy lion howling for a fight

Strap hanging gunshot sound
Doors slamming on the overground
Starlings are tough but the lions are made of stone
Her evening paper is horror torn
But there's hope later for Capricorns
Her lucky stars give her just enough to get her home
Then she's reading about a swing to the right
But she's thinking about a stranger in the night
I'm thinking about the lions tonight
What happened to the lions


Lyrics submitted by Dasch

Lions Lyrics as written by Mark Knopfler

Lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

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Lions song meanings
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    General Comment

    To me this song is taking place on Trafalgar Square. "Dirty town" would be London, then (and believe me, it is dirty and would have been much more so in the 80s). The "square" is pretty self-explanatory. There are "flags" in front of the National Gallery sometimes and always on top of it and several other buildings around the Square. The "church" would be Saint-Martin-in-the -Fields then. The "station" would be the Charing Cross underground station which has an entrance on Trafalgar Square (near that entrance there is a traffic light also mentioned in the song). And of course there are the "lions made of stone", the four huge stone lions beneath Nelson's Column.

    Of course this is only my interpretation, influenced by the fact that I have walked across Trafalgar Square feeling lonely like the girl mentioned in the song myself several times. But the similarities between this song and the location are striking and we know (from "Wild West End" on the same album) that Knopfler wrote about a location just 2 min away on foot.

    Well, I can only say that whenever I hear this song it reminds me of those lonely times on Trafalgar Square at sunset I have experienced.

    berzerkon January 09, 2007   Link

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