paroles de chanson My Old Man - Rodney Atkins
I
got
a
picture
of
him,
barefoot
in
the
mud.
Behind
his
grandpa's
plow
an'
two
great
mules.
When
he
turned
ten
years
old,
on
May
8,
'53.
He
grew
up
fearin'
God
in
Washburn,
Tennessee.
The
closest
thing
he
had
to
a
Dad
was
his
Uncle
Bob.
An'
he
could
only
dream
of
things
like
little
league
baseball.
An'
that
little
boy,
with
big
blue
eyes
and
calloused
hands,
Huh,
became
my
old
man.
Well
she
was
a
Kentucky
girl,
born
on
Valentine's
Day.
The
fourth
child
of
five
to
my
Grandma,
Eula
May.
So
shy
and
beautiful
with
sunset
hair
and
emerald
eyes.
Her
Daddy
spent
his
life
workin'
in
the
coal
mines.
Now
in
my
eyes,
all
my
life,
my
Daddy's
been
a
Saint.
But
even
Saints
need
Angels
to
show
them
the
way.
And
over
thirty-seven
years
ago,
he
asked
for
Margaret
Lynn's
hand.
And
that
Angel
married
my
old
man.
And
there
were
times
I
tried
to
buck,
the
truthful
things
they
said.
But
now
I'm
glad
that,
more
than
once,
they
rattled
my
stubborn
head.
'Cause
my
folks
are
just
like
mountains,
I
looked
at
from
afar.
But
now
the
closer
I
get
to
them,
the
bigger
they
are.
The
time
seems
to
fly
anymore,
and
the
holidays
are
so
far
apart.
There's
no
way
a
'phone
call
could
express
what's
in
my
heart.
So
this
is
just
a
song
to
say
how
greatful
I
am.
For
Mamma
and
my
old
man.
For
Mamma
and
Dad.
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