| Palmetto rose in the A/C vent
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| Cross-stitch pillow where the headrest went
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| Said his cab was his orneriest friend
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| Left hand jumping the trees in the wind
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| Thought he had the red lights memorized
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| Glass in the gravel like the stars in the sky
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| In that slow-motion minute between living and dead
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| He looked in my eyes and he told me, he said
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| It’s war that I wage to get up every day
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| It’s a fiberglass boat, it’s azaleas in May
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| It’s the women I love and the law that I hate
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| But Lord, let me die in the Iodine State
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| Lord, let me die in the Iodine State
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| Palmetto rose in the sidewalk mud
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| Dirty white stem and a big green bud
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| Catch them coming out of a King Street store
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| Some bullshit story about the Civil War
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| Now, you can believe what you want to believe
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| But there ain’t no making up a basket weave
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| Everybody in the tri-county knows
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| Who makes the best palmetto rose
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| And it’s war that we wage to get up every day
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| It’s a basket of sweetgrass, a wedding bouquet
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| It’s the ladies I love and the law that I hate
|
| But Lord, let me die in the Iodine State
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| Lord, let me die in the Iodine State
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| Out on Sullivan’s Island, they’re swimming
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| On the beach where the big boats rolled in
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| With the earliest slaves and their children
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| Our first American kin
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| Here on King Street we’re selling our roses
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| Two for a five dollar bill
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| At night, after everything closes
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| I follow my own free will
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| And I take in my fill
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| I take in my fill |