| Song | 08 granduncles |
| Artist | Frontier Ruckus |
| Album | Eternity Of Dimming |
| Download | Image LRC TXT |
| 作词 : Matthew Christopher Milia | |
| 作曲 : Matthew Christopher Milia | |
| Papa’s standing sort of bovine | |
| In the shrine of his brother’s room, the priest | |
| Recently deceased in this North Country heat | |
| Lunch meat on the kitchen counter | |
| Mary’s counting bug bites on a sunburned shoulder | |
| I’m counting sacramental rites and old crucifixes | |
| All my great-uncles’ nights of cocktail mixes | |
| Are over | |
| Then we encounter | |
| Accidental modern radio hits | |
| Spits his brother’s boom-box | |
| From the room walks Papa and then sits | |
| And then it’s | |
| Time | |
| Where the handicap tourist-trap putt-putt courses | |
| And trailers patched with corrugated scrap metal and divorces | |
| Stand | |
| Well, I got a granduncle and he lives inland | |
| Where the pure manure summer vapors get fanned | |
| By electric fence whir and a wave of the hand | |
| Of the Amish infants standing barefoot in the sand | |
| While the gas-station kids hang out idle and bland | |
| At the Subway | |
| Well, him and Anne died down in some dim town | |
| Where he built a swimming pool into the swampy farm ground | |
| Where the accumulation of the dimming pounds down | |
| Since the 70s | |
| The pool | |
| Has a cool blue aqua shade | |
| Like the Gatorade that my dad likes to drink | |
| Where you’ll peer into the pump-house, dear | |
| Or the diving board where you laid on the brink | |
| But please don’t freeze or fade | |
| Like the bottles of booze | |
| That snooze beneath the sink | |
| And if my reasoning gets frayed | |
| It’ll cauterize us tauter ties someday | |
| I think | |
| When the roofers jump in the seaway | |
| At midday in their jean-shorts to cool down | |
| We’ll go down to Morristown | |
| And bask there in the decay | |
| And ask where our summer glories drown | |
| With the subtle carnage of the bloated rock bass | |
| Sucking in the bright sky summer boat gas | |
| Floating there | |
| As we boated past | |
| Slinking through the stony Thousand Islands | |
| That go sinking in the water with the slickest absence of violence | |
| But | |
| In the musty attic loft | |
| I knew your young sore ecstatic soft | |
| Body | |
| The waitress’ language was blaring out, “Can you | |
| Bear the despair of the typos on the menu?” | |
| I wheeled you through the field with the billboards | |
| You wheeled the Ford to the sordid Price Chopper | |
| Where every shopper was leaning in the struggle to stand | |
| Like the green copper-stained gravestones that sink into the land | |
| That night | |
| Earthworms were squirming their way through my dark feel | |
| Some sermons found permanence on ancient-burned reel-to-reel | |
| If permanence is arbitrary | |
| Who decides the summers where we will | |
| Be forever? | |
| I’d like to meet that thing | |
| It’s a dimming thing |
| zuo ci : Matthew Christopher Milia | |
| zuo qu : Matthew Christopher Milia | |
| Papa' s standing sort of bovine | |
| In the shrine of his brother' s room, the priest | |
| Recently deceased in this North Country heat | |
| Lunch meat on the kitchen counter | |
| Mary' s counting bug bites on a sunburned shoulder | |
| I' m counting sacramental rites and old crucifixes | |
| All my greatuncles' nights of cocktail mixes | |
| Are over | |
| Then we encounter | |
| Accidental modern radio hits | |
| Spits his brother' s boombox | |
| From the room walks Papa and then sits | |
| And then it' s | |
| Time | |
| Where the handicap touristtrap puttputt courses | |
| And trailers patched with corrugated scrap metal and divorces | |
| Stand | |
| Well, I got a granduncle and he lives inland | |
| Where the pure manure summer vapors get fanned | |
| By electric fence whir and a wave of the hand | |
| Of the Amish infants standing barefoot in the sand | |
| While the gasstation kids hang out idle and bland | |
| At the Subway | |
| Well, him and Anne died down in some dim town | |
| Where he built a swimming pool into the swampy farm ground | |
| Where the accumulation of the dimming pounds down | |
| Since the 70s | |
| The pool | |
| Has a cool blue aqua shade | |
| Like the Gatorade that my dad likes to drink | |
| Where you' ll peer into the pumphouse, dear | |
| Or the diving board where you laid on the brink | |
| But please don' t freeze or fade | |
| Like the bottles of booze | |
| That snooze beneath the sink | |
| And if my reasoning gets frayed | |
| It' ll cauterize us tauter ties someday | |
| I think | |
| When the roofers jump in the seaway | |
| At midday in their jeanshorts to cool down | |
| We' ll go down to Morristown | |
| And bask there in the decay | |
| And ask where our summer glories drown | |
| With the subtle carnage of the bloated rock bass | |
| Sucking in the bright sky summer boat gas | |
| Floating there | |
| As we boated past | |
| Slinking through the stony Thousand Islands | |
| That go sinking in the water with the slickest absence of violence | |
| But | |
| In the musty attic loft | |
| I knew your young sore ecstatic soft | |
| Body | |
| The waitress' language was blaring out, " Can you | |
| Bear the despair of the typos on the menu?" | |
| I wheeled you through the field with the billboards | |
| You wheeled the Ford to the sordid Price Chopper | |
| Where every shopper was leaning in the struggle to stand | |
| Like the green copperstained gravestones that sink into the land | |
| That night | |
| Earthworms were squirming their way through my dark feel | |
| Some sermons found permanence on ancientburned reeltoreel | |
| If permanence is arbitrary | |
| Who decides the summers where we will | |
| Be forever? | |
| I' d like to meet that thing | |
| It' s a dimming thing |
| zuò cí : Matthew Christopher Milia | |
| zuò qǔ : Matthew Christopher Milia | |
| Papa' s standing sort of bovine | |
| In the shrine of his brother' s room, the priest | |
| Recently deceased in this North Country heat | |
| Lunch meat on the kitchen counter | |
| Mary' s counting bug bites on a sunburned shoulder | |
| I' m counting sacramental rites and old crucifixes | |
| All my greatuncles' nights of cocktail mixes | |
| Are over | |
| Then we encounter | |
| Accidental modern radio hits | |
| Spits his brother' s boombox | |
| From the room walks Papa and then sits | |
| And then it' s | |
| Time | |
| Where the handicap touristtrap puttputt courses | |
| And trailers patched with corrugated scrap metal and divorces | |
| Stand | |
| Well, I got a granduncle and he lives inland | |
| Where the pure manure summer vapors get fanned | |
| By electric fence whir and a wave of the hand | |
| Of the Amish infants standing barefoot in the sand | |
| While the gasstation kids hang out idle and bland | |
| At the Subway | |
| Well, him and Anne died down in some dim town | |
| Where he built a swimming pool into the swampy farm ground | |
| Where the accumulation of the dimming pounds down | |
| Since the 70s | |
| The pool | |
| Has a cool blue aqua shade | |
| Like the Gatorade that my dad likes to drink | |
| Where you' ll peer into the pumphouse, dear | |
| Or the diving board where you laid on the brink | |
| But please don' t freeze or fade | |
| Like the bottles of booze | |
| That snooze beneath the sink | |
| And if my reasoning gets frayed | |
| It' ll cauterize us tauter ties someday | |
| I think | |
| When the roofers jump in the seaway | |
| At midday in their jeanshorts to cool down | |
| We' ll go down to Morristown | |
| And bask there in the decay | |
| And ask where our summer glories drown | |
| With the subtle carnage of the bloated rock bass | |
| Sucking in the bright sky summer boat gas | |
| Floating there | |
| As we boated past | |
| Slinking through the stony Thousand Islands | |
| That go sinking in the water with the slickest absence of violence | |
| But | |
| In the musty attic loft | |
| I knew your young sore ecstatic soft | |
| Body | |
| The waitress' language was blaring out, " Can you | |
| Bear the despair of the typos on the menu?" | |
| I wheeled you through the field with the billboards | |
| You wheeled the Ford to the sordid Price Chopper | |
| Where every shopper was leaning in the struggle to stand | |
| Like the green copperstained gravestones that sink into the land | |
| That night | |
| Earthworms were squirming their way through my dark feel | |
| Some sermons found permanence on ancientburned reeltoreel | |
| If permanence is arbitrary | |
| Who decides the summers where we will | |
| Be forever? | |
| I' d like to meet that thing | |
| It' s a dimming thing |