paroles de chanson Micheline - Sun Kil Moon
Micheline
used
to
come
to
our
house
and
knock
on
our
door.
My
dad
would
answer
and
say,
"What
do
you
want
girl?"
And
she'd
say,
"Can
I
take
a
bath
with
Mark?"
My
dad
would
say,
"My
son
ain't
here,"
Send
her
home
and
shut
the
door
and
we'd
all
laugh.
And
Micheline
would
walk
down
the
street
Glowing
and
smiling
like
she
just
got
Paul
McCartney's
autograph.
Her
brain
worked
a
little
slower
than
the
others;
she
wore
thick-rimmed
glasses.
She
took
a
different
bus
to
school
than
other
kids
and
was
in
different
kid
of
classes.
When
she
got
older
a
neighborhood
thug
moved
in
with
her
And
started
taking
her
welfare
payments.
He
took
her
down
to
the
bank,
Helped
her
withdraw
her
savings
that
was
put
away
for
her
and
he
went
off
with
it.
The
cops
caught
up
with
him,
he
did
a
little
time
and
cut
too
many
years
later.
He's
doing
life
in
a
Florida
penitentiary
with
his
father,
both
of
them
for
murder.
Micheline,
Micheline.
Micheline,
Micheline.
Micheline,
Micheline,
Micheline.
She
wanted
love
like
anyone
else.
Micheline,
Micheline,
Micheline,
She
had
dreams
like
anyone
else.
My
friend
Brett,
my
friend
Brett,
my
friend
Brett,
my
friend
Brett,
he
liked
to
play
the
guitar.
But
he
had
an
awkward
way
of
playing
barre
chords
With
two
fingers
spreading
his
index
and
middle
fingers
really
far
apart.
One
day
in
band
practice
he
dropped
like
a
deer
was
shot
and
was
flipping
around
like
a
fish.
He
had
an
aneurysm
triggered
by
a
nerve
in
his
hand
from
the
strain
he
was
putting
on
it.
I
went
to
see
him
in
Ohio;
he
had
a
horseshoe
shaped
scar
on
his
scalp
and
he
talked
real
slow.
We
played
pool
like
we
did
in
our
teens
and
his
head
was
shaved
and
he
still
wore
bell-bottomed
jeans.
In
'99
I
was
on
tour
in
Sweden
when
I
called
home
To
tell
my
mom
that
I
got
a
part
in
a
movie
When
she
said
"Mark,
there's
something
that
you
need
to
know."
"Brett
died
the
other
day,
you
really
should
send
a
letter
to
his
mom
and
dad."
And
I
got
on
my
train
in
Malmo
And
looked
out
at
the
snow
feeling
somewhere
between
happy
and
sad.
My
friend
Brett,
my
friend
Brett.
My
friend
Brett,
my
friend
Brett.
My
friend
Brett,
my
friend
Brett,
my
friend
Brett.
He
had
a
wife
and
a
son.
My
friend
Brett,
my
friend
Brett,
my
friend
Brett.
He
just
liked
to
play
guitar
and
he
never
hurt
anyone.
My
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma.
Before
she
passed
away
we'd
go
and
visit
her
at
my
aunt's
house
when
I
was
small.
I
couldn't
bear
the
shape
she
was
in
so
at
the
top
of
the
driveway
I'd
sit
in
the
car.
One
day
I
was
just
fucking
around
when
I
put
it
in
reverse
and
I
was
free-falling.
I
remember
the
car
moving
backwards;
my
heart
was
beating
and
I
blacked
out.
Another
car
was
coming
down
the
street
and
I
totaled
them
both
and
I
got
knocked
out.
My
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma.
First
time
I
met
her,
she
lived
in
L.A.;
I
think
it
was
Huntington
Park.
I
made
friends
with
a
kid
named
Marceau
and
another
kid
named
Cyrus
Hunt.
We'd
go
downtown
and
get
ice
cream
and
feed
french
fries
to
the
pigeons
And
talk
to
the
handicapped
vets
from
Vietnam.
It
was
the
first
time
I
saw
a
hummingbird,
a
palm
tree,
or
a
lizard.
Or
saw
an
ocean,
or
heard
David
Bowie's
"Young
Americans"
And
I
saw
the
movie
"Benji"
in
theaters.
My
grandma,
my
grandma.
My
grandma,
my
grandma.
My
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma.
I
heard
she
had
a
pretty
hard
life.
But
after
her
first
husband
passed
away
She
met
a
man
from
California
and
he
treated
her
really
nice.
My
grandma,
my
grandma.
My
grandma,
my
grandma.
My
grandma,
my
grandma,
my
grandma.
My
grandma
was
diagnosed
at
62.
Her
kids
stepped
up
to
the
plate
for
her
and
were
there
the
whole
way
through.
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