I was born on a Sunday, with blood on my hands In a room full of phonographs and old electric fans And I slept in a graveyard for bicycles and cars And I dreamed of distant scenery, but I never strayed too far.
Because I do what they ask me I never run my mouth And by the time they turn against me I'll have them figured out.
And I learned to lie By watching you turn to your enemies And the apple you've got in your eyes Has become a stain you don’t' want.
So I left for the city as soon as I could walk But the buildings loomed like sentinels; it wasn't what I though So I slept in your bathtub, while you put your make-up on And I daydreamed about your lungs 'til your cigarettes were gone.
Now I roam because I have to I'm never welcome long And though this road leads to disaster I've always got my songs.
And I learned to laugh By watching you burn all your photographs And you're right that the good things won't last But there wars are never won by our twiddling thumbs.
Well, I did what they asked me: I never ran my mouth. And by the time they turned against me, I had them figured out And now I roam because I have to: I'm never welcome long And though this road leads to disaster, I've always got my songs.
And I learned to die By watching you choke on your misery And if the apple is torn from my eye I won't be alone, because I'm going home.