paroles de chanson Leaving the City - Joanna Newsom
Hay,
and
a
clean
stall,
And
ivy
on
a
garden
wall,
And
a
sign
saying
Sold,
And
an
old
coat
For
the
bad
cold.
I
believe
in
you.
Do
you
believe
in
me?
What
do
you
want
to
do?
Are
we
leaving
the
city?
On
the
black
road,
Through
the
gold
fields,
While
the
fields
are
plowed,
Towards
what
we
are
allowed...
The
bridle
bends
in
idle
hands
And
slows
our
canter
to
a
trot.
We
mean
to
stop,
in
increments,
but
can′t
commit.
We
post
and
sit,
in
impotence:
The
harder
you
hit,
the
deeper
the
dent.
We
seek
our
name.
We
seek
our
fame,
and
our
credentials
(Paned
in
glass,
trained
to
master
incidentals).
Bleach
our
collar,
leech
our
dollar
from
our
cents:
The
longer
you
live,
the
higher
the
rent.
Beneath
the
pale
sky,
Beside
the
red
barn,
Below
the
white
clouds,
Is
all
we
are
allowed.
Here,
the
light
will
seep,
And
the
scythe
will
reap,
And
spirit
will
rend,
in
counting
toward
the
end.
In
December
of
that
year,
The
word
came
down
that
she
was
here.
The
days
grew
shorter.
I
was
sure,
if
she
came
'round,
I′d
hold
my
ground.
I'd
endure.
But
they'd
alluded
to
a
change
That
came
to
pass,
And
Spring,
deranged,
Weeping
grass
and
sleepless,
Broke
herself
upon
my
windowglass.
And
I
could
barely
breathe,
for
seeing
All
the
splintered
light
that
leaked
her
fissures,
Fleeing,
launched
in
flight:
Unstaunched
daylight,
brightly
bleeding,
Bleached
the
night
with
dawn,
deleting,
In
that
high
sun,
After
our
good
run,
When
the
spirit
bends
Beneath
knowing
it
must
end.
And
that
is
all
I
want
here:
To
draw
my
gaunt
spirit
to
bow
Beneath
what
I
am
allowed.
Beneath
what
I
am
allowed.
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