收聽Bruce Springsteen的Black Cowboys (Album Version)歌詞歌曲

Black Cowboys (Album Version)

Bruce Springsteen2005年4月26日

Black Cowboys (Album Version) 歌詞

Black Cowboys - Bruce Springsteen

Raney William's playground was among Haven's streets

 

Where he ran past melted candles and flower wreaths

Names and photos of the young black faces

 

Whose death and blood consecrated these places

 

Raney's mother said Raney stay at my side

 

For you are my blessing you are my pride

 

It's your love here that keeps my soul alive

 

I want you to come home from school and stay inside

 

Raney'd do his work and put his books away

 

There was a channel showed a Western movie everyday

 

And that brought him home books on the black cowboys of the Oklahoma range

The Seminole scouts that fought the tribes of the Great Plains

 

Summer come and the days grew long

 

Raney always had his mother's smile to depend on

Along the street of stray bullets he made his way

To the warmth of her arms at the end of each day

 

Come the Fall the rain flooded these homes

 

In Ezekiel's valley of dry bones

 

It fell hard and dark to the ground

 

It fell without a sound

 

And they took up with a man whose business was the boulevard

Whose smile was fixed in a face that was never off guard

In the pipes 'neath the kitchen sink his secrets are kept

 

In the day behind drawn curtains in the next bedroom he slept

 

And she got lost in the days

 

The smile Raney depended on dusted away

The arms that held him were no more his own

Bones

 

In the kitchen Raney slipped his hand between the pipes

From a brown bag pulled five hundred dollar bills and stuck it in his coat side

Stood in the dark at his mother's bed

Brushed her hair and kissed her eyes

 

In the twilight Raney walked to the station on streets of stone

Through Pennsylvania and Ohio his train drifted on

 

Through the small towns of Indiana the big train crept

 

As he lay his head back on his seat and slept

 

He woke and the towns gave way to muddy fields of green

 

Corn and cotton and endless nothing in between

 

Over the rutted hills of Oklahoma the red sun slipped and was gone

 

The moon rose and stripped the earth to its bone