Rows of lights in a circle of steel
Where you place your bets on a great big wheel
High windows flickerin' down through the snow
A time you know
Sights and sounds of the people goin' 'round
Everybody's in step with the season

A child is born to a welfare case
Where the rats run around like they own the place
The room is chilly, the building is old
That's how it goes
The doctor's found on his welfare round
And he comes and he leaves on the double

Deck The Halls was the song they played
In the flat next door where they shout all day
She tips her gin bottle back till it's gone
The child is strong
A week, a day, they will take it away
For they know about all her bad habits

Christmas dawns and the snow lets up
And the sun hits the handle of her heirloom cup
She hides her face in her hands for a while
Says look here child
Your father's pride was his means to provide
And he's servin' three years for that reason

Rows of lights in a circle of steel
Where you place your bets on a great big wheel
High windows flickerin' down through the snow
A time you know
Sights and sounds of the people goin' 'round
Everybody's in step with the season


Lyrics submitted by redundantman

Circle of Steel Lyrics as written by Gordon Lightfoot

Lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

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Circle of Steel song meanings
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    General Comment

    I always understood the first line to refer more to the proverbial "wheel of fortune" (and not the game show), rather than a roulette wheel.

    the juxtaposition of the holiday season - a joyful time spent with family against the lonely new mother who's counting the days until her child is taken from her - along with the wintery gray and snowy cold make this song very dreary and sad.

    This is a sad story of somebody who has nothing at all (to the point of her only valued item being an "heirloom cup") losing the only thing she has left, her newborn child. The losing bet on the wheel of fortune.

    As a new father, the "a week, a day they will take it away" rips my heart out every time. This song depresses the heck out of me.

    the EYEon February 14, 2007   Link

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