It was midnight, midnight at noon
Everyone talked in rhyme
Everyone saw the big clock tickin',
Nobody knew, nobody knew the time
Elegant debutantes smiled
Everyone fought for dimes
Newspapers screamed for blood
It was the best of times

Every place around the world, it seemed the same
Can't hear the rhythm for the drums
Everybody wants to look the other way
When something wicked this way comes

Sometimes they tie a thief to the tree
Sometimes I stare, sometimes it's me

Everyone told the truth
All that we heard were lies
A Pope claimed that he'd been wrong in the past
This was a big surprise
Nobody knew the time
Everyone fell in love
A Cardinal's wife was jailed
The government saved a dying planet
When popular icons failed

Every place around the world it seemed the same
Can't hear the rhythm for the drums
Everybody wants to look the other way
When something wicked this way comes

Sometimes they tie a thief to the tree
Sometimes I stare, sometimes it's me
Sometimes I stare, sometimes it's me


Lyrics submitted by Novartza

Jeremiah Blues, Pt. 2 Lyrics as written by Dominic James Miller

Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC

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Jeremiah Blues, Pt. 1 song meanings
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    General Comment

    “Jeremiah Blues,” in turn, lambasted the corruption and hypocrisy of the Catholic Church. The track included another Shakespearean reference in “something wicked this way comes,” for an elegantly dressed, violent, money-hungry world happily ticking down toward some form of apocalypse—a “midnight at noon.” (“And it shall come to pass in that day, saith the Lord God, that I will cause the sun to go down at noon, and I will darken the earth in the clear day”—Amos 8:9.) Ironically, just a year after the release of the song, Pope John Paul II finally publicly admitted that his Church had been wrong in their Inquisition’s persecution of Galileo for his contrary-to-the-Bible suggestion that the earth was not the center of the universe. “A pope claimed that he’d been wrong in the past....”

    [From Rock & Holy Rollers: The Spiritual Beliefs of Chart-Topping Rock Stars in Their Lives and Lyrics by Geoffrey D. Falk.]

    sillybunnyon September 21, 2006   Link

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