| [00:01.11] |
|
| [00:07.14] |
Oh, he listens to the countdown, every Sunday morning |
| [00:13.47] |
From a cold solitary prison cell |
| [00:18.71] |
And the music from his radio is like freedom down a dirt toad |
| [00:27.41] |
Makes that eight by ten a brighter hill |
| [00:33.49] |
|
| [00:33.72] |
Before he started doing all the hard time that he's doing |
| [00:41.14] |
He was singing in them honky-tonks and dives |
| [00:46.51] |
He dreamed of being somebody, now he's number 37405 |
| [00:56.85] |
|
| [01:02.45] |
Well she used to come and see him, every other weekend |
| [01:09.26] |
And bring him all the news from way back home |
| [01:14.50] |
It's been two birthdays since he's kissed her, |
| [01:19.71] |
Five seconds since he's missed her |
| [01:22.87] |
Now the perfume on those letters ain't that strong |
| [01:28.28] |
|
| [01:30.19] |
He's got too much time to think about the night he had too much to drink |
| [01:37.44] |
And all his buddies, they begged him not to drive |
| [01:42.07] |
Mr. Life of the Party, he's now number 37405 |
| [01:52.98] |
|
| [02:19.71] |
Old judge on the bench said, "Son, your crime's got consequences." |
| [02:25.09] |
It's what he told him, fifteen years ago |
| [02:30.30] |
He took a life and that's a fact, he'd give his own to give it back |
| [02:38.88] |
Today's the day he finally gets parole |
| [02:44.20] |
|
| [02:45.76] |
He turns in them prison clothes, and stands there at the forkin' road |
| [02:54.09] |
And mama prays and waits while he decides |
| [02:58.42] |
And the angels close their eyes... |
| [03:04.96] |
|
| [03:08.50] |
Listens to the birds sing on a perfect autumn morning |
| [03:13.92] |
Just down the road, rings an old church bell |
| [03:19.03] |
|