| Song | The Good Gardener (On How He Fell) |
| Artist | Augie March |
| Album | Sunset Studies |
| 作曲 : Richards | |
| Here sits a once good gardener, pale as a shadow of a doubt. | |
| Once a happy dweller of a garden good, once a sleepy sinner, | |
| once cast out | |
| To the sea where the crossy-eyed maids murmur low, "do you see, do you see | |
| where the doubts cross his shadow?" | |
| Drowned and amoral, I pollinate the coral and reek of the deep | |
| where I've tended the water weed - | |
| I was once your good gardener, sing to bring on Spring. | |
| I know where your good grass grows, | |
| I know what your boyfriend knows, | |
| I was your good gardener. | |
| I saw twilight car waxers, corpulent dog walkers, clean canny couples on the sunset strip, | |
| From a tower forty miles to the east of Augusta saw a plague on the Indian | |
| a'coming on a windship. | |
| You were in the garden when the wind swept up and took the foul words from your mouth, | |
| Now you know what your sarcasm really really means, | |
| It's the tearing with your teeth of the flesh from the bones of your brother - | |
| Kill the shrub to fertilise the flower, | |
| Did I hear you saying that the form doesn't matter? | |
| Well form into matter, the matter is forever, but only in a good garden. | |
| Black Rock bound in the Brighton bowl where the seas of desolation roll, | |
| Where you're borne and borne and borne in again to the pebble-feather shore of forgotten friends. | |
| Think how you can't see the science without seeing first the self, | |
| But then nobody thinks of growing somebody else, | |
| And how the sun, hungry sun, holds the withered withered world, | |
| So why shouldn't I kiss the beautiful girl? | |
| When I was her good gardener. | |
| Sing of the Summer sham, | |
| O see them grow tall, see them in their rot, see them go to seed in the cemetery plot. | |
| I was your good gardener. | |
| Sing to bring on Spring, | |
| O ice of Winter would crackle and splinter with my love in everything, | |
| Ice of Winter would crackle and splinter with my love in everything, | |
| I was your good gardener... | |
| The sea is stark and lovely, and it scares me to the point of rapture, | |
| I was your good gardener, of some good stature. | |
| The sea is stark and lovely, and it scares me to the point of rapture, | |
| I was your good gardener, now I - can barely - look at ya |
| zuò qǔ : Richards | |
| Here sits a once good gardener, pale as a shadow of a doubt. | |
| Once a happy dweller of a garden good, once a sleepy sinner, | |
| once cast out | |
| To the sea where the crossyeyed maids murmur low, " do you see, do you see | |
| where the doubts cross his shadow?" | |
| Drowned and amoral, I pollinate the coral and reek of the deep | |
| where I' ve tended the water weed | |
| I was once your good gardener, sing to bring on Spring. | |
| I know where your good grass grows, | |
| I know what your boyfriend knows, | |
| I was your good gardener. | |
| I saw twilight car waxers, corpulent dog walkers, clean canny couples on the sunset strip, | |
| From a tower forty miles to the east of Augusta saw a plague on the Indian | |
| a' coming on a windship. | |
| You were in the garden when the wind swept up and took the foul words from your mouth, | |
| Now you know what your sarcasm really really means, | |
| It' s the tearing with your teeth of the flesh from the bones of your brother | |
| Kill the shrub to fertilise the flower, | |
| Did I hear you saying that the form doesn' t matter? | |
| Well form into matter, the matter is forever, but only in a good garden. | |
| Black Rock bound in the Brighton bowl where the seas of desolation roll, | |
| Where you' re borne and borne and borne in again to the pebblefeather shore of forgotten friends. | |
| Think how you can' t see the science without seeing first the self, | |
| But then nobody thinks of growing somebody else, | |
| And how the sun, hungry sun, holds the withered withered world, | |
| So why shouldn' t I kiss the beautiful girl? | |
| When I was her good gardener. | |
| Sing of the Summer sham, | |
| O see them grow tall, see them in their rot, see them go to seed in the cemetery plot. | |
| I was your good gardener. | |
| Sing to bring on Spring, | |
| O ice of Winter would crackle and splinter with my love in everything, | |
| Ice of Winter would crackle and splinter with my love in everything, | |
| I was your good gardener... | |
| The sea is stark and lovely, and it scares me to the point of rapture, | |
| I was your good gardener, of some good stature. | |
| The sea is stark and lovely, and it scares me to the point of rapture, | |
| I was your good gardener, now I can barely look at ya |