arrive/of points unchartred part through fear/part through reliance on getting this near/having regular good times usually late/passing through the uncertain state/through the flinch
I just ate and I heard the change rattle in your tin I point my eyes on distant blurred horizon me for charity Or coffee make the day go faster - faster
Please don't let me see So many problems and disharmony Without knowing the reason Without knowing the facts And knowing that knowing can be hard to
So busy picking holes in our skin That stretches tight to keep us all in When what we thought were eternal friends Have disappeared from the scene Or
Closed off he took her by the hand and coughed To cover an understanding loss Perhaps this stake could be put across Without saying whether it was good
reliance on getting this near Don't leave me alone! Having regular good times - good times - usually late - usually late Passing through the uncertain state Through the flinch
Invisible people with invisible hands Holding very obvious collection cans Anonymous people with anonymous jobs Hurry past for fear of being late for
With detailed precision Nothing omitted Made the incision Cut to what fitted None of the trends None of the friends of the packaging crew Who sells
Blind people must fall in love with a sense of mind, a sense of touch But when you insist on finding shadows in which to kiss And down the lights to
Growling as I smile and stare from the other side of the street Is it the speed I'm walking at or the shoes upon my feet? I couldn't afford the baseball
Acclimatized slowly to image distortion Selling the wares and wearing so thin Which is worse? To be in or out of proportion? Documentality always stays
Vacancy - Room to let any dumb ideas in to this empty head "Gospel, man!" - Don't quote me please, it was the first thing I thought but now it's been
We went up to the building site Saw the bricks and the concrete piles And watched them all working Building muscles and no-one smiled We stood around
Well, I don't know who invented the clock But it began a process that will never stop At the age of six or seven or so It was a decoration that went