Walker I first ran into Stoney, it was a bar downtown Was up Richmond, Virginia, just bumming around Suitcase to suitcase, we started him talking Finding out about the things we've shared in the miles we've been. He had a gray pillowcase full of books by Durrell Played some old concertina, all beat up and she played like hell Until you got him started singing Gospel songs He drank all night for nothing, he told his stories till dawn. He said: 'Come on, get your bag, boy! Sun's up now and it's time to roll' 'You know there ain't no better time than early in the morning to be out walking down that road' 'Just feeling another day beginning while some fools just rushing on by' 'We'll be like some Mr. Independence, we're taking our own sweet time'. So we walked on out that highway under a clear blue sky I's listening to the tales he told, drinking warm red wine 'Bout the night he rolled seven, about some girl he'd done wrong All the thingd he could think of while we walked along. Yeah, ol' Stoney had a magic, made him hard to forget Like the night we flew down the highway (his old pickup, it nearly wrecked!) A crazy woman driving, all drunked up and carrying on Till Stoney finally calmed her singing those Gospel songs. We split the road at Norwood, he just shook my hand He said: 'I'll see you some place, friend, but you know he never has' But we were that free then, just walking down the road Never really caring where that old highway goes. Yeah, Stoney was a liar (a bullsh**ter!) ain't no doubt about it It was just the way he told things, you never want to doubt him He kept you going when the road got rough And brought you through the lean times just by making it up, just by making it up.