The Dutchman
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- For other uses of the Dutchman, see the Dutchman (disambiguation)
"The Dutchman" is a folk song written by Michael Peter Smith in 1968. It was popularized by Steve Goodman).
[edit] Lyrics
- The Dutchman's not the kind of man
- To keep his thumb jammed in the dam
- That holds his dreams in
- But that's a secret only Margaret knows
- When Amsterdam is golden in the morning
- Margaret brings him breakfast
- She believes him
- He thinks the tulips bloom beneath the snow
- He's mad as he can be but Margaret only sees that sometimes
- Sometimes she sees her unborn children in his eyes
- Chorus:
- Let us go to the banks of the ocean
- Where the walls rise above the Zuiderzee
- Long ago, I used to be a young man
- And dear Margaret remembers that for me
- The Dutchman still wears wooden shoes
- His cap and coat are patched with love
- That Margaret sewed in
- Sometimes he thinks he's still in Rotterdam
- He watches tugboats down canals
- And calls out to them when he thinks he knows the Captain
- Til Margaret comes to take him home again
- Through unforgiving streets
- That trip him though she holds his arm
- Sometimes he thinks that he's alone and calls her name
- Chorus
- The windmills whirl the winter in
- She winds his muffler tighter,
- They sit in the kitchen
- Some tea with whiskey keeps away the dew
- He sees her for a moment, calls her name
- She makes the bed up humming some old love song
- She learned it when the tune was very new
- He hums a line or two, they hum together in the night
- The Dutchman falls asleep and Margaret blows the candle out.
- Chorus