• 																					He was a short order cook, and not too much to look at
    And he traded in his foot, for a medal in the war
    He loved a girl named Lila, in a bar across the highway
    And you ought to see him smilin' at her comin' through the door

    Lila always knew, she wasn't no ravin' beauty
    She traded in her virtue to a trucker at sixteen
    But she forgets to remember how he left her off in Denver
    When she sees her Cooky smilin' as she opens up the screen

    And he says
    "Hi Lila, how about a cup of coffee?
    Take a load off, take your shoes off, here's the sugar and the cream"
    Cooky's been to war and Lila's been to Denver
    And both of them are casualties of someone else's dream

    Cooky pours the trucker's coffee, Lila serves the rigger's whiskey
    And resists their invitations to go ridin' for a while
    'Cause at a diner across the highway, on a shelf above the pastry
    There's a cup reserved for Lila and the man who makes her smile

    When he says
    "Hi Lila, how about a cup of coffee?
    Take a load off, take your shoes off, here's the sugar and the cream"
    'Cause Cooky's been to war and Lila's been to Denver
    And both of them are casualties of someone else's dream

    Now as the nation rolls along, like a semi down the highway
    Casting lonely broken bodies in the grass along the road
    I've finally found a reason for believing in the future
    Seeing Cooky and his Lila drinking coffee all alone

    Oh yes
    "Hi Lila, how about a cup of coffee?
    Take a load off, take your shoes off, here's the sugar and the cream"
    'Cause Cooky's been to war and Lila's been to Denver
    And both of them are casualties of someone else's dream

    Cooky's been to war, Lord and Lila's been to Denver
    And both of them are casualties of someone else's dream

    (c)1975 Everyday Songs/Baron Music Publ.

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