Song Description
A final warning to a friend wasting away.
Song Length |
4:02 |
Genre |
Country - Alternative, Country - Contemporary |
Tempo |
Medium Slow (91 - 110) |
Lead Vocal |
Male Vocal |
Mood |
Poignant, Moving |
Subject |
Worry, Failure |
Similar Artists |
Willie Nelson, Garth Brooks |
Language |
English |
Era |
1950 - 1959 |
| |
Lyrics
You look weary, my friend,
Just bones and skin,
Like a fence post strung with barbed wire.
I can tell by your smile,
Which shows every mile,
That even the wind feels like fire.
And the trees are all dry,
Where you once rested by,
Leaves you feeling a little betrayed.
But my branches are long, and my trunk is strong,
And I invite you to rest in my shade.
It ain't nothin' but pride,
That keeps you outside,
But you insist that's just your way.
But one thing you learned,
Is that sunlight burns
Worse at the end of the day.
With rivers of sweat,
You made good your debts,
But you still ain't convinced that you've paid.
And when you stand on your toes, you scare all the crows,
But you still haven't scared me away.
I've seen all the ghosts
That make you their host,
Like a house left to stand on a hill.
The ghosts do their best,
There ain't no time to rest,
When there's still one left to kill.
And if you search in the dark.
You'll find three stones to mark
Those that are cold as the clay:
One for the haints, and one for the spirits,
And one for the friends passed away.