| Just a little thought in the head of the one
|
| With the sunburnt cheeks and the eyes to the ground
|
| Making earwaxed tongue-tied gutter sounds
|
| Thinking of the lost rib, dialing the indelible
|
| Thinking the unthinkable-no one’s home
|
| And the eyes say I don’t believe we’ve met
|
| I don’t believe you’ve had the privilege
|
| I don’t believe we’ve met
|
| When the wind blows cold
|
| And the eyes of the child grow old
|
| When the erratic conga rises and falls
|
| Above the faithful metronome
|
| You can take me back to the gravestone
|
| See her strain from the weight of the globe
|
| Spinning around his assumptions-barefoot and tight-lipped
|
| He in his favourite chair blowing his world around
|
| First she’s Beatrice, then she’s a pumpkin
|
| Then she’s a faded leaf in a book on his pantry shelf
|
| The head sees the hand play with the ring in the pocket
|
| And the head knows the hand knows the ring is as round
|
| As the tear-soaked shoulder in a room in another town
|
| The ring is getting heavy and so is the crown
|
| Which she drags to the chair feebly to keep the swelling down
|
| When the bird in the bush is worth two in the hand
|
| And the empty cage holds the empty man
|
| The bird keeps flying from the Orgoglian rising
|
| And the phone keeps ringing and the phone keeps ringing
|
| And the ring keeps slipping and the phone
|
| And the phone keeps on ringing
|
| And he’s thinking about the one who got away |