Empty Kettle

Die Like Gentlemen

    Continúa después del anuncio

    The wife of the Tin Man brushes tears from her eyes
    She cries for her rose bushes as they wither and die
    Her husband the Tin Man looks on in dismay
    Like all things not metal, he says: These roses decay
    He offers to chop them all down and so set them free
    From pain and disease, from heartache and grief
    Why would anyone want muscle and skin over spindles and pins?
    Why would anyone not wish to be tin?

    With sadness he can't understand his wife has agreed
    She savors the last of their bloom and the Tin Man proceeds
    To prune and dismember, destroy and uproot
    A half-dozen rose bushes fall 'neath his axe and his boot
    But the last one is wilder, a jungle of vines
    That fights to defend and stave off the end
    Why would anyone want pain and disease over sprockets and grease?
    Why would anyone be willing to bleed?

    Continúa después del anuncio

    The Tin Man discovers this last bush was much more
    A spine made of iron and nails in its thorns
    Hour after hour he hacks and he heaves
    Perhaps, says his weeping wife, you should let this one be
    But the tin man's determined to rid this thing free
    Of flower and leaf, of sunshine and seed
    Why would anyone want pain and disease over sprockets and grease?
    Why would anyone want muscle and skin over spindles and pins?
    Why would anyone not wish to be tin?

    Información de la canción

    Composición:

    ¿Los datos están equivocados?

    Enviar revisión