Take the children and yourself
And hide out in the cellar
By now the fighting will be close at hand
Don't believe the church and state
And everything they tell you
Believe in me, I'm with the high command

Can you hear me, can you hear me running?
Can you hear me running, can you hear me calling you?
Can you hear me, can you hear me running?
Can you hear me running, can you hear me calling you?

There's a gun and ammunition
Just inside the doorway
Use it only in emergency
Better you should pray to God
The Father and the Spirit
Will guide you and protect from up here

Can you hear me, can you hear me running?
Can you hear me running, can you hear me calling you?
Can you hear me, can you hear me running?
Can you hear me running, can you hear me calling you?

Swear allegiance to the flag
Whatever flag they offer
Never hint at what you really feel
Teach the children quietly
For some day sons and daughters
Will rise up and fight while we stand still

Can you hear me, can you hear me running?
Can you hear me running, can you hear me calling you?
Can you hear me, can you hear me running?
Can you hear me running, can you hear me calling you?

Can you hear me, can you hear me running (can you hear me calling you?)
Can you hear me hear running, can you hear me calling you?
(Can you hear me running) Can hear me running (can you hear me calling you)?
Can you hear me
Hear me calling you
(Can you hear me running) hear me running, babe
Can you hear me running (hear me running)
Calling you


Lyrics submitted by IronHalo

Silent Running Lyrics as written by Mike Rutherford B.a. Robertson

Lyrics © BMG Rights Management, CONCORD MUSIC PUBLISHING LLC, Downtown Music Publishing, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

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Silent Running song meanings
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    General Comment

    "You would have to dig back into the latter 20th century, America, and research pop culture of the 1980's," -- ye gods, that line makes me feel old...

    But actually, "war gone completely hot" in pop culture pretty much meant "bombs fall. everyone dies." No one left to surrender to. If there was anything at all after the war, it was a Mad Max post-apocalyptic scenario, nothing with modern nation-states as such. So I don't think the song is about anything on the scale of a U.S./U.S.S.R. conflict.

    When the song came out, the vibe I got from it made me think of the various revolutions and counter-revolutions that were going on in South America at the time. But I have nothing to back that up; that's just the feeling of one person who happened to be in the zeitgeist...

    Lijemoon June 07, 2009   Link

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