"High Flying Bird" — the cautionary tale about fame.
You wore a little cross of gold around your neck
I saw it as you flew between my reason
Like a raven in the night time when you left
I wear a chain upon my wrist that bears no name
You touched it and you wore it
And you kept it in your pillow all the same
My high-flying bird has flown from out my arms
I thought myself her keeper
She thought I meant her harm
She thought I was the archer
A weather man of words
But I could never shoot down
My high-flying bird
The white walls of your dressing room are stained in scarlet red
You bled upon the cold stone like a young man
In the foreign field of death
Wouldn't it be wonderful is all I heard you say
You never closed your eyes at night and learned to love daylight
Instead you moved away
Знаете ли вы, что...
- From Don't Shoot Me I'm Only the Piano Player (1973). The high-flying bird who flew too high — the celebrity destroyed by ambition. One of the early Elton John songs about the costs of the career he was already having.