Song | Oxford Street |
Artist | Everything But the Girl |
Album | The Works |
Download | Image LRC TXT |
作词 : Thorn | |
When I was ten I thought my brother was God - he'd lie in bed and turn out the | |
light with a fishing rod. I learned the names of all his football team, aid I | |
still remembered them when I was nineteen. | |
Strange the things deal that I remember still - shouts from the playground when | |
I was home and ill. My sister taught me all that she learned there; when we | |
grow up, we said, we'd share a flat somewhere. | |
When I was seventeen, London meant Oxford Street. | |
Where I grow up there were no factories. there was a school and shops and some | |
fields and trees, and rows of houses one by one appeared. I was born in one and | |
lived there for eighteen years. | |
Then when I was nineteen. I thought the Humber would be the gateway from my | |
little world into the real world. But there is no real world - we live side by | |
side, and sometimes collide. . | |
When I was seventeen, London meant Oxford Street. It was a little world; I grew | |
up in a little world. |
zuo ci : Thorn | |
When I was ten I thought my brother was God he' d lie in bed and turn out the | |
light with a fishing rod. I learned the names of all his football team, aid I | |
still remembered them when I was nineteen. | |
Strange the things deal that I remember still shouts from the playground when | |
I was home and ill. My sister taught me all that she learned there when we | |
grow up, we said, we' d share a flat somewhere. | |
When I was seventeen, London meant Oxford Street. | |
Where I grow up there were no factories. there was a school and shops and some | |
fields and trees, and rows of houses one by one appeared. I was born in one and | |
lived there for eighteen years. | |
Then when I was nineteen. I thought the Humber would be the gateway from my | |
little world into the real world. But there is no real world we live side by | |
side, and sometimes collide. . | |
When I was seventeen, London meant Oxford Street. It was a little world I grew | |
up in a little world. |
zuò cí : Thorn | |
When I was ten I thought my brother was God he' d lie in bed and turn out the | |
light with a fishing rod. I learned the names of all his football team, aid I | |
still remembered them when I was nineteen. | |
Strange the things deal that I remember still shouts from the playground when | |
I was home and ill. My sister taught me all that she learned there when we | |
grow up, we said, we' d share a flat somewhere. | |
When I was seventeen, London meant Oxford Street. | |
Where I grow up there were no factories. there was a school and shops and some | |
fields and trees, and rows of houses one by one appeared. I was born in one and | |
lived there for eighteen years. | |
Then when I was nineteen. I thought the Humber would be the gateway from my | |
little world into the real world. But there is no real world we live side by | |
side, and sometimes collide. . | |
When I was seventeen, London meant Oxford Street. It was a little world I grew | |
up in a little world. |