| Song | Labelled With Love |
| Artist | Squeeze |
| Album | Essential Squeeze |
| Download | Image LRC TXT |
| 作词 : DIFFORD, CHRISTOPHER/TILBROOK, GLENN | |
| (difford/tilbrook) | |
| She unscrews the top of a new whiskey bottle | |
| And shuffles about in her candle lit hovel, | |
| Like some kind of witch with blue fingers in mittens | |
| She smells like the cat and the neighbours she sickens, | |
| The black and white t.v. has long seen a picture | |
| The cross on the wall is a permanent fixture, | |
| The postman delivers the final reminders | |
| She sells off her silver and poodles in china. | |
| Drinks to remember, i me and myself | |
| And winds up the clock | |
| And knocks dust from the shelf | |
| Home is a love that i miss very much | |
| So the past has been bottled and labelled with love. | |
| During the war time an american pilot | |
| Made every air raid a time of excitement, | |
| She moved to his prairie and married the texan | |
| She learnt from a distance how love was a lesson, | |
| He became drinker and she became mother | |
| She knew that one day she'd be one or the other, | |
| He ate himself older, drunk himself dizzy | |
| Proud of her features, she kept herself pretty. | |
| He like a cowboy died drunk in his slumber | |
| Out on the porch in the middle of summer, | |
| She crossed the ocean back home to her family | |
| But they had retired to roads that were sandy, | |
| She moved home alone without friends or relations | |
| Lived in a world full of age reservation, | |
| On moth eaten armchairs she'd say that she'd sod all | |
| The friends who had left her to drink from the bottle. |
| zuo ci : DIFFORD, CHRISTOPHER TILBROOK, GLENN | |
| difford tilbrook | |
| She unscrews the top of a new whiskey bottle | |
| And shuffles about in her candle lit hovel, | |
| Like some kind of witch with blue fingers in mittens | |
| She smells like the cat and the neighbours she sickens, | |
| The black and white t. v. has long seen a picture | |
| The cross on the wall is a permanent fixture, | |
| The postman delivers the final reminders | |
| She sells off her silver and poodles in china. | |
| Drinks to remember, i me and myself | |
| And winds up the clock | |
| And knocks dust from the shelf | |
| Home is a love that i miss very much | |
| So the past has been bottled and labelled with love. | |
| During the war time an american pilot | |
| Made every air raid a time of excitement, | |
| She moved to his prairie and married the texan | |
| She learnt from a distance how love was a lesson, | |
| He became drinker and she became mother | |
| She knew that one day she' d be one or the other, | |
| He ate himself older, drunk himself dizzy | |
| Proud of her features, she kept herself pretty. | |
| He like a cowboy died drunk in his slumber | |
| Out on the porch in the middle of summer, | |
| She crossed the ocean back home to her family | |
| But they had retired to roads that were sandy, | |
| She moved home alone without friends or relations | |
| Lived in a world full of age reservation, | |
| On moth eaten armchairs she' d say that she' d sod all | |
| The friends who had left her to drink from the bottle. |
| zuò cí : DIFFORD, CHRISTOPHER TILBROOK, GLENN | |
| difford tilbrook | |
| She unscrews the top of a new whiskey bottle | |
| And shuffles about in her candle lit hovel, | |
| Like some kind of witch with blue fingers in mittens | |
| She smells like the cat and the neighbours she sickens, | |
| The black and white t. v. has long seen a picture | |
| The cross on the wall is a permanent fixture, | |
| The postman delivers the final reminders | |
| She sells off her silver and poodles in china. | |
| Drinks to remember, i me and myself | |
| And winds up the clock | |
| And knocks dust from the shelf | |
| Home is a love that i miss very much | |
| So the past has been bottled and labelled with love. | |
| During the war time an american pilot | |
| Made every air raid a time of excitement, | |
| She moved to his prairie and married the texan | |
| She learnt from a distance how love was a lesson, | |
| He became drinker and she became mother | |
| She knew that one day she' d be one or the other, | |
| He ate himself older, drunk himself dizzy | |
| Proud of her features, she kept herself pretty. | |
| He like a cowboy died drunk in his slumber | |
| Out on the porch in the middle of summer, | |
| She crossed the ocean back home to her family | |
| But they had retired to roads that were sandy, | |
| She moved home alone without friends or relations | |
| Lived in a world full of age reservation, | |
| On moth eaten armchairs she' d say that she' d sod all | |
| The friends who had left her to drink from the bottle. |