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Casey Dienel - Hometown Hooray lyrics
Down by the old stone church
 Where the joe-pye weed and the mallows grow
 Those petals bigger then my fist
 Watch them bob and bow when the wind does blow
 There grows a cypress tree
 And in its trunk I carved you name
 And right beside it I carved mine
 They?ll give you the hometown hooray
 When you come home, baby
 Bronze your combat boots
 And set your bones in clay
 Write down every word you ever had to say
 No one wants to believe you died in vain
 The first spring that you were gone
 The women who lived on the flat roof-tops
 Had sherds sewn with quickly germinating seeds of greens
 In all of their Sapphic celebrations
 They held fires and dances, chanted your name
 Tied yellow ribbons round the trunks of trees in town
 They?ll give you the hometown hooray
 When you come home, baby
 Bronze your combat boots
 And set your bones in clay
 Write down every word you ever had to say
 With Homeric undertones and half the length
 But the skies held a collusion of their own
 And on the sunniest day there ever was
 You died at the tusk of a bayonet
 And Aphrodite found your body
 Sprinkled nectar in your wounds
 And you blood dripped red anemones
 That shimmered just like precious stones
 And they floated down the riverbank
 To the tributary that now shares your name
 And the rapids from then on ran redCasey Dienel - Hometown Hooray - http://motolyrics.com/casey-dienel/hometown-hooray-lyrics.html
 They run red to this day
 They?ll give you the hometown hooray
 When you come home, baby
 Oh bronze your combat boots
 And set your bones in clay
 Write down every word you ever had to say
 With Homeric undertones and half the length
 We used to walk past the blue schoolhouse
 We wore our love like it was a crown
 And our skin was a map we knew by heart
 We never once got lost
 We never once got lost
 No one wants to believe you died in vain
 The Sapphic women who love you so
 Still cry every spring when the fennel goes
 And the wheat and the barley and the hardy rye
 Wither and go to seed
 I walk down to the old stone church
 where the joe-pye weed and the mallows grow
 Those petals droop now heavy with rain
 watch them bob and bow when the wind does blow
 There, my favorite cypress tree
 As tall as the steeples I can see
 They?ve tied a yellow-ribbon ?round its trunk
 that covers your name where I carved it twice
 I rip that ribbon off the tree
 Burn it down by the river that now shares your name
 Place the ash where the water ravenously licks the riverbank
 We used to walk past the blue schoolhouse
 We wore our love like it was a crown
 And our skin was a map I knew by heart
 We never once got lost
 We never once got lost
 No one wants to believe you died in vain








