| I have lived in a junkyard,
|
| Where the weeds eat up the rain
|
| If you get anything there, even out of place
|
| You know there’s hell to pay
|
| And he said, «You're as sick, as you are lovely,
|
| And in need of a hand»
|
| He tells me, «You are never worthy»
|
| But I was just a child, you see
|
| That’s my reality
|
| He had a sick little girl, dirty and harmed
|
| With a breast plate made of metal
|
| She drives all day in a rusty Buick
|
| And her feet don’t reach the pedals
|
| Got a jar of flies, a father’s disguise,
|
| Where his heart should be
|
| A mouth is sown together
|
| She screams with those eyes
|
| (She screams with those eyes)
|
| She screams with those eyes
|
| She’s as sick, as she is lovely
|
| And in need of my hand
|
| He tells her, «You are never worthy»
|
| She was all alone, you see
|
| That was her reality
|
| Yeaaaah…
|
| Well I’ve shoulda been sleepin', shoulda been dreamin'
|
| But I wake up to broken glass
|
| There’ll be one more empty desk in my homeroom class
|
| I got an old bone pocket knife, tight in my right hand
|
| To save my poor mother from the junkyard man
|
| And I say, «He's as sick as he is lovely,
|
| And in need of a hand»
|
| He will know he’s not worthy
|
| When he dies alone you’ll see
|
| That’s his reality
|
| I’m not sick, I am lovely
|
| And hatred is the curse of man
|
| And I will not feel unworthy
|
| Cause I’ve washed my hands, you see
|
| That’s my reality, yeah |