Macy Glacier is a 6-kilometre (3.7 mi) long and 2.3-kilometre (1.4 mi) crescent-shaped glacier on the southern slopes of the Tangra Mountains, Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica. The glacier is bounded by Friesland Ridge to the northwest, Levski Ridge to the northeast and Peshev Ridge to the southeast, and flows southwestwards into the head of Brunow Bay.
The feature was named by the UK Antarctic Place-names Committee in 1958 for Robert Macy, Master of the brig Aurora, one of the fleet of American sealers from New York which visited the South Shetland Islands in 1820–21.
The glacier's midpoint is located at 62°41′20″S 60°08′10″W / 62.68889°S 60.13611°W / -62.68889; -60.13611Coordinates: 62°41′20″S 60°08′10″W / 62.68889°S 60.13611°W / -62.68889; -60.13611 (British mapping in 1968, and Bulgarian in 2005 and 2009).
It's really more than i can say
Looking at this tower
Angels are off duty and asleep
In these wee hours
And there's no place i can go
And this noise inside my head
It comes and goes
It comes and it goes
There's really nothing you can stop
So i guess i'm gonna try
Climbing up this tower
Walking up the stones
Stocking feet
To the clock
This is one place that i know
And the face in front of me
It comes and goes
Not some lucky charm
But something to hold onto
That could hold onto me
And there's no place i can go
And this noise inside my head
It comes and goes