Lyrics Canaan - Mister Lies
For
that
year,
your
guise
was
the
little
patch
of
woods
That
stood
behind
your
house.
A
spared
phalanx
of
spindly
elms
On
the
edge
of
what
once
was.
The
train
made
its
way
through
it
every
hour,
And
that
streak
of
tired
green
light
barrels
by,
Clacking
through
the
fecund
underbrush.
You'd
listen
to
it
as
you
tried
to
fall
asleep.
It
was
that
tamed
country
aesthetic
In
which
you
sough
solace.
It
came
in
the
morning
on
the
sprinklings
of
dew
And
faded
with
each
sentimental
sunset,
Which
were
like
marmalade.
I've
tried
to
understand
it
myself,
But
it
is
almost
too
much.
It
is
a
river
of
muffled
feelings
and
anxiety,
A
deep
drink
of
silences,
A
nostalgia
for
the
things
that
used
to
bring
you
joy.
Yet
you
crumble
to
its
neuroses,
With
your
paranoid
sense
of
necessary
reassurance.
The
expanses
of
serpentine
bliss
and
snaking
paths
That
grow
cindery
in
the
late
summer
Looped
themselves
around
you,
Binding
you
to
this
most
typical
of
place
names.
I
have
watched
you
wither,
And
succumb
to
this
strange
place.
With
a
sense
of
disillusionment,
You
sought
your
perfection.
So
you
constructed
your
glass
jar,
All
vacuumed
up
with
your
sanity.
You
perched
it
on
the
ridge
top
where
you
could
watch
The
manic
depression
unfold,
Teeming
under
the
emerald
grass.
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