paroles de chanson Family Hands - Mary Chapin Carpenter
Last
Sunday
we
got
in
the
car
and
we
drove
To
the
town
you
were
raised
in,
your
boyhood
home
The
trees
were
just
turning,
up
on
the
ridge
And
this
was
your
valley
when
you
were
a
kid
You
showed
me
the
railroad
that
your
daddy
worked
on
As
we
neared
the
old
house
where
your
granny
lives
on
She′s
nearing
ninety
years
now,
with
her
daughters
by
her
side
Who
tend
the
places
in
the
heart
where
loneliness
can
hide
Raised
by
the
women
who
are
stronger
than
you
know
A
patchwork
quilt
of
memory
only
women
could
have
sewn
The
threads
were
stitched
by
family
hands,
protected
from
the
moth
By
your
mother
and
her
mother,
the
weavers
of
your
cloth
Your
grandmother
owned
a
gun
in
1932
When
times
were
bad
just
everywhere,
you
said
she
used
it
too
And
the
life
and
times
of
everyone
are
traced
inside
their
palms
Her
skin
may
be
so
weathered,
but
her
grip
is
still
so
strong
And
I
see
your
eyes
belong
to
her
and
too
your
mama
too
A
slice
of
Virginia
sky,
the
clearest
shade
of
blue
Raised
by
the
women
who
are
stronger
than
you
know
A
patchwork
quilt
of
memory
only
women
could
have
sewn
The
threads
were
stitched
by
family
hands,
protected
from
the
moth
By
your
mother
and
her
mother,
the
weavers
of
your
cloth
And
a
rich
man
you
might
never
be,
they'd
love
you
just
the
same
They′ve
handed
down
so
much
to
you
besides
your
Christian
name
And
the
spoken
word
won't
heal
you
like
the
laying
on
of
hands
Belonging
to
the
ones
who
raised
you
to
a
man
Raised
by
the
women
who
are
stronger
than
you
know
A
patchwork
quilt
of
memory
only
women
could
have
sewn
And
the
threads
were
stitched
by
family
hands,
protected
from
the
moth
By
your
mother
and
her
mother,
the
weavers
of
your
cloth
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