|
She was fresh out of college |
|
First one in her family to go |
|
And California seemed like heaven |
|
Pulaski, Tennessee was her home |
|
She worked on losing her southern accent |
|
Turned her back on her |
|
Baptist ways |
|
She bought some clothes that barely covered |
|
Her fair skinned body, went to |
|
Nashville and caught a plane |
|
The clouds rushed beneath her |
|
As the L.A. smog filled the air |
|
And she smiled when the airlock opened |
|
And the Pacific breeze blew through her hair |
|
She thought about the boys from |
|
AlabamaWho came into town every |
|
Friday night |
|
And drank beer out of big glass quart bottles |
|
And left their trail of blood and tears behind |
|
She thought the men in |
|
California would be different |
|
She'd grown up watching them on her |
|
TVBut the men she came to know in |
|
California |
|
Left her longing for |
|
Pulaski, Tennessee |
|
Good ideas always start with a full glass |
|
And just breathing here can make a girl's nose bleed |
|
Dreams here live and die just like a stray dog |
|
On a dirt road somewhere in |
|
TennesseeThe storefronts are all filled up with eyeballs |
|
As the policemen clear out the street |
|
For a line of cars with their headlights burning |
|
Driving slow through |
|
Pulaski, Tennessee |