paroles de chanson A Town Called a Big Nothing - Elvis Costello
Big
nothing.
He
stood
in
the
road
outside
of
town
with
a
broken
clockwork
toy
in
His
hand:
A
graveyard
for
childish
dreams
in
his
palm;
a
broken
lifeline.
Big
nothing.
The
mechanical
amusement
sputtered
to
life
in
his
fist.
As
he
clenched,
it
Whirred
and
died
again.
It
was
a
cowboy
who
drew
his
gun,
but
the
Pistol
was
welded
to
the
holster
by
age
and
careless
children,
so
it
Struggled
and
strained
and
it
unwound
his
own
spring.
Big
nothing.
He
didn′t
need
tattoos
to
show
where
he
had
been
and
who
he
had
loved.
It
Was
the
same
thing
that
men
had
cried
for;
that
women
had
dyed
their
hair
For.
The
cellophane
illusion
of
a
starry
sky
stretched
over
an
open
sore.
Big
nothing.
He
thought
about
his
lost
daughter:
the
way
her
eyes
would
alight
at
the
Greedy
circus
barker's
blackmail
song;
how
he
wanted
to
smash
her
skull
When
she
parroted
back,
′tell
mommy;
tell
poppy;
you
need
this
little
Dolly.'
Big
nothing.
(x2)
The
smoky
voice
of
the
petaled
girl
woke
him
long
enough.
There
was
too
Much
light
in
the
room,
so
he
unscrewed
the
bulb.
She
took
him
to
bed
like
An
adopted
dog.
Big
nothing.
She
lit
sickly
incense,
as
he
tried
to
tell
if
the
resemblance
was
pure
And
coincidental.
He
unleashed
his
grip
on
the
toy,
all
it
meant
to
him,
And
it
wound
down
forever.
Big
nothing.
He
woke
up
in
a
sweat.
The
next
day,
with
her
smile
still
painted
on
his
Mouth,
he
walked
out
of
a
town
called
Big
Nothing.
Big
nothing.
(repeat
until
fade)
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