(D#dim)Sky
lark,
have you (F)an y thing to (C)say to me?
Won’t you (E7)tell me where my (Am7)love can be?
Is there a (G7)mead ow in the (C)mist
where some one’s (F)wait ing to be (Db)kissed?
(Em7)Sky
(A)lark,
have you seen a val ley (Cmaj7)green with spring,
Where my (E7)heart can go a (Am7)jour ney ing
o ver the (G7)shad ows and the (C)rain, to a (G7)blos som cov ered (C6)lane?
And in your (F)lone ly (F#dim)flight,
have n’t you (C7)heard the mu sic (B7)in the night?
Won der ful (A7)mu sic, (Dm)faint as a (Bb7)“will o’ the wisp” (F)cra zy (C7)as a (F)loon,
(E)sad as a gyp sy ser e (B7)nad ing the (E)moon.
(G7)Oh, (D#dim)Sky
lark,
I don’t (F)know if you can (C)find these things,
but my (E7)heart is rid ing (Am7)on your wings.
So, if you (G7)see them an y (C)where, won’t you (G7)lead me (C)there?
This page shows “Skylark” by Johnny Mercer in our color-coded kid songbook view — every note is colored by pitch (red C, orange D, yellow E, green F, blue G, purple A, pink B) and the lyrics sit directly under each note, so children can sing along while they play. The song is in the key of C at 90 BPM, a comfortable easy-level arrangement perfect for first-time learners.