| I guess things were always kind of quiet around Putnam County
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| Kind of shy and sleepy as it clung to the skirts of the two-lane
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| That was stretched out just like an asphalt dance floor
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| Where all the old-timers in bib jeans and store bought boots
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| Were hunkering down in the dirt
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| To lie about their lives and the places that they’d been
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| And they’d suck on Coca Colas, yeah, and be spitting Day’s Work
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| Until the moon was a stray dog on the ridge and
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| And the taverns would be swollen until the naked eye of two a. |
| m
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| And the Stratocasters slung over the burgermeister beer guts
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| And swizzle-stick legs jackknifed over naugahyde stools… yeah
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| And the witch hazel spread out over the linoleum floors
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| And pedal-pushers stretched out over a midriff bulge
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| And the coiffed brunette curls over Maybelline eyes
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| Wearing Prince Machiavelli, or something yeah
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| Estee Lauder, smells so sweet
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| And I elbowed up at the counter with mixed feelings over mixed drinks
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| As Bubba and the Roadmasters moaned in pool hall concentration and
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| And knit their brows to cover the entire Hank Williams songbook
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| Whether you like it or not
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| And the old National register was singing to the tune of fifty-seven dollars
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| and fifty-
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| Seven cents yeah
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| And then it’s last call, one more game of eight-ball
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| Berniece’d be putting the chairs on the tables
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| And someone come in and say, 'Hey man, anyone got any jumper cables?'
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| 'Is that a 6 or a 12 volt, man? |
| I don’t know…'
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| Yeah, and all the studs in town would toss 'em down
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| And claim to fame as they stomped their feet
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| Yeah, boasting about being able to get more ass than a toilet seat
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| And the GMC’s and the Straight-8 Fords were coughing and wheezing
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| And they percolated as they tossed the gravel underneath the fenders
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| To weave home a wet slick anaconda of a two-lane
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| With tire irons and crowbars a-rattling
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| With a tool box and a pony saddle
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| You’re grinding gears and you’re shifting into first
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| Yeah, and that goddamned tranny’s just getting worse, man
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| With the melody of see-ya-laters and screwdrivers on carburetors
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| Talking shop about money to loan
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| And palominos and strawberry roans yeah
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| See ya tomorrow, hello to the Missus
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| With money to borrow and goodnight kisses
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| As the radio spit out Charlie Rich, man
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| He sure can sing that son of a bitch
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| And you weave home, yeah, weaving home
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| Leaving the little joint winking in the dark warm narcotic American night
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| Beneath a pin cushion sky
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| And it’s home to toast and honey, gotta start up the Ford, man
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| Yeah, and your lunch money’s right over there on the draining board
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| And the toilet’s running Christ, shake the handle
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| And the telephone is ringing, it’s Mrs. Randall
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| And where the hell are my goddamned sandals?
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| What you mean, the dog chewed up my left foot?
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| With the porcelain poodles and the glass swans
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| Staring down from the knickknack shelf. |
| yeah
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| And the parent’s permission slips for the kids' field trips
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| Yeah, and a pair of mukluks scraping across the shag carpet yeah
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| And the impending squint of first light
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| And it lurked behind a weeping marquee in downtown Putnam
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| Yeah, and it’d be pulling up any minute now
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| Just like a bastard amber Velveeta yellow cab on a rainy corner
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| And be blowing its horn in every window in town |