Do You Know Iron Maiden Lyrics? Quiz – 15 Questions
November 10, 2025
Quiz
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Think you know every Iron Maiden lyric by heart? From the galloping riffs of The Trooper to the epic storytelling of Hallowed Be Thy Name, Iron Maiden’s songs are filled with powerful words that define heavy metal history. Test your knowledge of the band’s legendary lyrics and see if you can truly call yourself an Iron Maiden superfan in this 15-question challenge!
#1. ‘I have a constant fear that something’s always near.’
#2. ‘Won’t you come into my room, I wanna show you all my wares.’
#3. ‘So get down on your knees honey, assume an attitude, you just pray that I’ll be waiting, ‘cos you know I’m coming soon.’
#4. ‘Hold up your heads, be proud of what you are. Now it has come, freedom at last. Turning the tides of history, and your past.’
#5. ‘See, onward she comes, onward she nears, out of the sun. See, she has no crew, she has no life, wait but here’s two.’
#6. ‘A knife at your throat another body on the pile, a contract to keep and it’s service with a smile. Murder for vengeance or murder for gain, Death on the streets or a blackened out jail.’
#7. ‘Can I tempt you, come with me, be Devil may care, fulfill your dream.’
#8. ‘But if you asked me a question, would I tell you the truth. Now there’s something to bet on, you’ve got nothing to lose.’
#9. ‘You’re standing in the wings, then you wait for the curtain to fall. Knowing the terror and holding you have on us all.’
#10. ‘All my hopes and expectation, looking for an explanation, have I found my destination? I just can’t take no more.’
#11. ‘The killing fields, the grinding wheels crushed by equilibrium. Separate lives no more disguise, no more second chances.’
#12. ‘He’s walking like a small child. But watch his eyes burn you away. Black holes in his golden stare. God knows he wants to go home.’
#13. ‘If you’re feeling down, depressed and lonely, I know a place where we can go.’?
#14. ‘I’m waiting in my cold cell, when the bell begins to chime.’
#15. ‘Trace your way back 50 years, to the glow of Dresden, blood and tears.’