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The Rambling Silver Rose
© 1992 Stephen Savitzky. CC-by-nc-sa.
Very loosely inspired by Cindy McQuillin's songs of spaceships, spaceport bars, and hard-drinking, independent-minded women.
inst: 2 lines of verse
C Csus2 F C
S: `` She's just a piece of space-junk,'' they told Rosie at the yard;
Csus2 F G6
S: ``Her ports are etched, her linings cracked-- she wouldn't get you far.
C^* F
S: Unlucky, and a killer, too--the life support's been holed;
C Csus2 C F G C
S: She's not worth half her mass in scrap.'' She quickly told them, (N:) `` Sold!''
inst. last 2 lines of refrain
C Csus2 F C
N: She was just an old tramp freighter on the belt-to-Saturn run,
Csus2 F G6
N: Hauling heavy metals outward, ice and methane toward the Sun,
C^* F
N: But with cargo tankage empty she pulls 2.7 g--
C Csus2 F G C
N: So I fitted her for charter, to run fast and fleet and free.
F(D\up3) C F
A: (She/I) always knew that (she/I) was born to follow a wandering star;
C F G
A: (She's/I've) had a love in every port, a dr ink in every bar,
C^* F F7 F
S: But the lady's well contented with the w andering l ife she chose;
C F G C
N: I'll go where my wild heart takes me, in the {\it Rambling Silver Rose}.
C Csus2 F C
S: Now if Rosie walked in to the room you might not look her way,
Csus2 F G6
S: But if she caught you with her eye, you'd beg for her to stay;
C^* F
S: By morning you might sell your soul to keep her past the dawn,
C Csus2 F G C
N: But the wandering star is calling, and the Rambling Rose is gone.
F(D\up3) C F
A: (She/I) always knew that (she/I) was born to follow a wandering star;
C F G
A: (She's/I've) had a love in every port, a dr ink in every bar,
C^* F F7 F
S: But the lady's well contented with the w andering l ife she chose;
C F G C
N: I'll go where my wild heart takes me, in the {\it Rambling Silver Rose}.
C Csus2 F C
S: They'll drink her health this evening in a hundred spaceport bars
Csus2 F G6
S: As she drifts out in the darkness, sleeping wrapped in shining stars,
C^* F
N: But freedom is worth more to me than either love or life;
C Csus2 F G C
N: I may take a hundred lovers, but I'll never be a wife.
F(D\up3) C F
A: (She/I) always knew that she was born to follow a wandering star;
C F G
A: (She's/I've) had a love in every port, a dr ink in every bar,
C^* F F7 F
S: But the lady's well contented with the w andering l ife she chose;
C F G C
N: I'll go where my wild heart takes me, in the {\it Rambling Silver Rose}.
C F G C
S: She'll go where her wild heart takes her, she's the {\it Rambling Silver Rose}.
I like to think that this was largely inspired by the strong, independent
women in Cindy McQuillin's songs, but the horrible truth is that the original
``Rambling Silver Rose'' was Colleen's silver minivan. Now you know.