歌曲 | Suicide Underground |
歌手 | Air |
专辑 | The Virgin Suicides [O.S.T] |
下载 | Image LRC TXT |
作词 : | |
Everyone dated the demise of our neighborhood | |
from the suicides of the Lisbon girls. | |
People saw their clairvoyance in the wiped out elms, | |
and the harsh sunlight. | |
Some thought the tortures tearing the Lisbon girls | |
pointed to a simple refusal to accept the world | |
as it was handed down to them. | |
So full of flaws. | |
But the only thing we are certain of | |
after all these years, | |
is the insufficiency of explanation. | |
(Obviously, doctor, you've never been a 13 year old girl.) | |
The Lisbon girls were | |
13- Cecilia | |
14- Lux | |
15- Bonnie | |
16- Mary | |
and 17- Therese. | |
No one could understand how | |
Mrs Lisbon and Mr Lisbon, | |
our math teacher, | |
had produced such beautiful creatures. | |
From that time on | |
The Lisbon house began to change. | |
Almost everyday | |
and even when she wasn't keeping an eye on Cecilia, | |
Lux would suntan on a towel, | |
wearing a swimsuit that caused the knife sharpener | |
to give her a 15 minute demonstration for free. | |
The only reliable boy who got to know Lux | |
was Trip Fontaine. | |
Who only 18 months before the suicides, | |
had emerged from baby fat, | |
to the delight of girls and mothers alike. | |
But few anticipated it would be so drastic. | |
The girls were pulled out of school, | |
and Mrs Lisbon shut the house in maximum security isolation. | |
The girls' only contact with the outside world | |
was through the catalogs they ordered, | |
that started to fill the Lisbon's mailbox | |
with pictures of high-end fashions and brochures for exotic vacations. | |
Unable to go anywhere, | |
the girls traveled in their imaginations. | |
To gold tipped Siamese temples, or past an old man with a leaf broom, | |
tiding a moss-carpeted speck of Japan. | |
And Cecilia hadn't died. | |
She was a bride in Calcutta. | |
Collecting everything we could of theirs, | |
we couldn't get the Lisbon girls out of our minds. | |
But they were slipping away. | |
The colours of their eyes were fading | |
along with exact locations of moles and dimples. | |
From 5 they had become 4, | |
and they were all living in the dead, | |
Becoming shadows. | |
We would have lost them completely | |
if the girls hadn't contacted us. | |
Lux was the last to go. | |
Fleeing from the house we had forgot to stop at the garage. | |
After the suicide free-for-all, | |
Mr and Mrs. Lisbon gave up any attempt to lead a normal life. | |
They had Mr Hedly pack up the house, | |
selling what furniture he could in a garage sale. | |
Everyone went just to look. | |
Our parents did not buy used furniture, | |
and they certainly didn't buy furniture tainted by death. | |
We of course took the family photos that were put out with the trash. | |
Mr. Lisbon put the house on the market, | |
and it was sold to a young couple from Boston. | |
It didn't matter in the end how old they had been. | |
Or that they were girls. | |
But only that we had loved them. | |
And they hadn't heard us calling..still do not hear us, | |
calling them out of those rooms. | |
Where they went to be alone for all time. | |
Alone in suicide. | |
Which is deeper then death. | |
And where we will never find the pieces, | |
to put them back together. |
zuo ci : | |
Everyone dated the demise of our neighborhood | |
from the suicides of the Lisbon girls. | |
People saw their clairvoyance in the wiped out elms, | |
and the harsh sunlight. | |
Some thought the tortures tearing the Lisbon girls | |
pointed to a simple refusal to accept the world | |
as it was handed down to them. | |
So full of flaws. | |
But the only thing we are certain of | |
after all these years, | |
is the insufficiency of explanation. | |
Obviously, doctor, you' ve never been a 13 year old girl. | |
The Lisbon girls were | |
13 Cecilia | |
14 Lux | |
15 Bonnie | |
16 Mary | |
and 17 Therese. | |
No one could understand how | |
Mrs Lisbon and Mr Lisbon, | |
our math teacher, | |
had produced such beautiful creatures. | |
From that time on | |
The Lisbon house began to change. | |
Almost everyday | |
and even when she wasn' t keeping an eye on Cecilia, | |
Lux would suntan on a towel, | |
wearing a swimsuit that caused the knife sharpener | |
to give her a 15 minute demonstration for free. | |
The only reliable boy who got to know Lux | |
was Trip Fontaine. | |
Who only 18 months before the suicides, | |
had emerged from baby fat, | |
to the delight of girls and mothers alike. | |
But few anticipated it would be so drastic. | |
The girls were pulled out of school, | |
and Mrs Lisbon shut the house in maximum security isolation. | |
The girls' only contact with the outside world | |
was through the catalogs they ordered, | |
that started to fill the Lisbon' s mailbox | |
with pictures of highend fashions and brochures for exotic vacations. | |
Unable to go anywhere, | |
the girls traveled in their imaginations. | |
To gold tipped Siamese temples, or past an old man with a leaf broom, | |
tiding a mosscarpeted speck of Japan. | |
And Cecilia hadn' t died. | |
She was a bride in Calcutta. | |
Collecting everything we could of theirs, | |
we couldn' t get the Lisbon girls out of our minds. | |
But they were slipping away. | |
The colours of their eyes were fading | |
along with exact locations of moles and dimples. | |
From 5 they had become 4, | |
and they were all living in the dead, | |
Becoming shadows. | |
We would have lost them completely | |
if the girls hadn' t contacted us. | |
Lux was the last to go. | |
Fleeing from the house we had forgot to stop at the garage. | |
After the suicide freeforall, | |
Mr and Mrs. Lisbon gave up any attempt to lead a normal life. | |
They had Mr Hedly pack up the house, | |
selling what furniture he could in a garage sale. | |
Everyone went just to look. | |
Our parents did not buy used furniture, | |
and they certainly didn' t buy furniture tainted by death. | |
We of course took the family photos that were put out with the trash. | |
Mr. Lisbon put the house on the market, | |
and it was sold to a young couple from Boston. | |
It didn' t matter in the end how old they had been. | |
Or that they were girls. | |
But only that we had loved them. | |
And they hadn' t heard us calling.. still do not hear us, | |
calling them out of those rooms. | |
Where they went to be alone for all time. | |
Alone in suicide. | |
Which is deeper then death. | |
And where we will never find the pieces, | |
to put them back together. |
zuò cí : | |
Everyone dated the demise of our neighborhood | |
from the suicides of the Lisbon girls. | |
People saw their clairvoyance in the wiped out elms, | |
and the harsh sunlight. | |
Some thought the tortures tearing the Lisbon girls | |
pointed to a simple refusal to accept the world | |
as it was handed down to them. | |
So full of flaws. | |
But the only thing we are certain of | |
after all these years, | |
is the insufficiency of explanation. | |
Obviously, doctor, you' ve never been a 13 year old girl. | |
The Lisbon girls were | |
13 Cecilia | |
14 Lux | |
15 Bonnie | |
16 Mary | |
and 17 Therese. | |
No one could understand how | |
Mrs Lisbon and Mr Lisbon, | |
our math teacher, | |
had produced such beautiful creatures. | |
From that time on | |
The Lisbon house began to change. | |
Almost everyday | |
and even when she wasn' t keeping an eye on Cecilia, | |
Lux would suntan on a towel, | |
wearing a swimsuit that caused the knife sharpener | |
to give her a 15 minute demonstration for free. | |
The only reliable boy who got to know Lux | |
was Trip Fontaine. | |
Who only 18 months before the suicides, | |
had emerged from baby fat, | |
to the delight of girls and mothers alike. | |
But few anticipated it would be so drastic. | |
The girls were pulled out of school, | |
and Mrs Lisbon shut the house in maximum security isolation. | |
The girls' only contact with the outside world | |
was through the catalogs they ordered, | |
that started to fill the Lisbon' s mailbox | |
with pictures of highend fashions and brochures for exotic vacations. | |
Unable to go anywhere, | |
the girls traveled in their imaginations. | |
To gold tipped Siamese temples, or past an old man with a leaf broom, | |
tiding a mosscarpeted speck of Japan. | |
And Cecilia hadn' t died. | |
She was a bride in Calcutta. | |
Collecting everything we could of theirs, | |
we couldn' t get the Lisbon girls out of our minds. | |
But they were slipping away. | |
The colours of their eyes were fading | |
along with exact locations of moles and dimples. | |
From 5 they had become 4, | |
and they were all living in the dead, | |
Becoming shadows. | |
We would have lost them completely | |
if the girls hadn' t contacted us. | |
Lux was the last to go. | |
Fleeing from the house we had forgot to stop at the garage. | |
After the suicide freeforall, | |
Mr and Mrs. Lisbon gave up any attempt to lead a normal life. | |
They had Mr Hedly pack up the house, | |
selling what furniture he could in a garage sale. | |
Everyone went just to look. | |
Our parents did not buy used furniture, | |
and they certainly didn' t buy furniture tainted by death. | |
We of course took the family photos that were put out with the trash. | |
Mr. Lisbon put the house on the market, | |
and it was sold to a young couple from Boston. | |
It didn' t matter in the end how old they had been. | |
Or that they were girls. | |
But only that we had loved them. | |
And they hadn' t heard us calling.. still do not hear us, | |
calling them out of those rooms. | |
Where they went to be alone for all time. | |
Alone in suicide. | |
Which is deeper then death. | |
And where we will never find the pieces, | |
to put them back together. |