歌曲 | The Floor |
歌手 | Buck 65 |
专辑 | Secret House Against The World |
作词 : Austin, Buck 65, Campbell | |
I can remember being seven years old | |
Having goldfish that circled around in a bowl | |
I would watch the forest burn and listen to the wind blow | |
I remember the table, the drapes, and the window | |
The dark brown everything, decoration, styling | |
Most of all, I can remember my mother smiling | |
Worn out and faded, my hometown was scrappy | |
More than anything, she wanted us to be happy | |
Little to eat and back and forth to the hospital | |
She was right, it's better to be happy if possible | |
But the old man was under attack and was weak | |
And continued to beat us several times a week | |
He lived like a king even though we were piss poor | |
I tried to be strong and careful what I wished for | |
My outside ached, my inside stung | |
The long leather belt had replaced his tongue | |
Not knowing how to run or how to hit the brakes | |
A white picket fence was built around a pit of snakes | |
Both a wonder and frightening, the thunder and lightning | |
These were the sounds and sights of a thousand fights | |
My mother, the poor fish, staging eternal | |
Charades and parades for the raging inferno | |
Wanting to be happy, beaten all the while | |
Asking me always, why don't you ever smile | |
And she'd show me how to do it, mother and wife | |
It was the saddest smile I ever saw in my life | |
It hurt worse than death but for her sake I tried | |
And one day all of those goldfish died | |
Hurricane, forest fire, out of control | |
Eyes open, floating on the water in the bowl | |
And when my father came home, he walked through the door | |
And threw those fish to the cat on the kitchen floor | |
And the wind died too and I was still a child | |
And the three of us watched as my mother smiled |
zuò cí : Austin, Buck 65, Campbell | |
I can remember being seven years old | |
Having goldfish that circled around in a bowl | |
I would watch the forest burn and listen to the wind blow | |
I remember the table, the drapes, and the window | |
The dark brown everything, decoration, styling | |
Most of all, I can remember my mother smiling | |
Worn out and faded, my hometown was scrappy | |
More than anything, she wanted us to be happy | |
Little to eat and back and forth to the hospital | |
She was right, it' s better to be happy if possible | |
But the old man was under attack and was weak | |
And continued to beat us several times a week | |
He lived like a king even though we were piss poor | |
I tried to be strong and careful what I wished for | |
My outside ached, my inside stung | |
The long leather belt had replaced his tongue | |
Not knowing how to run or how to hit the brakes | |
A white picket fence was built around a pit of snakes | |
Both a wonder and frightening, the thunder and lightning | |
These were the sounds and sights of a thousand fights | |
My mother, the poor fish, staging eternal | |
Charades and parades for the raging inferno | |
Wanting to be happy, beaten all the while | |
Asking me always, why don' t you ever smile | |
And she' d show me how to do it, mother and wife | |
It was the saddest smile I ever saw in my life | |
It hurt worse than death but for her sake I tried | |
And one day all of those goldfish died | |
Hurricane, forest fire, out of control | |
Eyes open, floating on the water in the bowl | |
And when my father came home, he walked through the door | |
And threw those fish to the cat on the kitchen floor | |
And the wind died too and I was still a child | |
And the three of us watched as my mother smiled |