| My father had a Randall knife, my mother gave it to him
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| When he went off to World War II to save us all from ruin
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| Now if you’ve ever held a Randall knife, you know my father well
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| If a better blade was ever made, it was prob’ly forged in hell
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| My father was a good man, he was a lawyer by his trade
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| And only once did I ever see him misuse the blade
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| Well, it almost cut his thumb off when he took it for a tool
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| The knife was made for darker things, you could not bend the rules
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| Well, he let me take it camping once on a Boy Scout jamboree
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| And I broke a half-an-inch off tryin' to stick it in a tree
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| Well, I hid it from him for a while, but the knife and he were one
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| And he put it in his bottom drawer without a hard word won
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| There it slept and there it stayed for twenty some-odd years
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| Sort of like Excalibur except waiting for a tear
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| My father died when I was forty and I couldn’t find a way to cry
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| Not because I didn’t love him, not because he didn’t try
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| Well, I’d cried for every lesser thing: whiskey, pain, and beauty
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| But he deserved a better tear and I was not quite ready
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| So we took his ashes out to sea and poured 'em off the stern
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| And then threw the roses in the wake of everything we’d learned
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| And when we got back to the house they asked me what I wanted
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| Not the law books, not the watch-I need the thing he’s haunted
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| My hand burned for the Randall knife there in the bottom drawer
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| And I found a tear for my father’s life and all that it stood for |