Ballad In Plain D

Album: Another Side of Bob Dylan (1964)
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  • I once loved a girl, her skin it was bronze
    With the innocence of a lamb, she was gentle like a fawn
    I courted her proudly but now she is gone
    Gone as the season she's taken

    In a young summer's youth, I stole her away
    From her mother and sister, though close did they stay
    Each one of them suffering from the failures of their day
    With strings of guilt they tried hard to guide us

    Of the two sisters, I loved the young
    With sensitive instincts, she was the creative one
    The constant scrapegoat, she was easily undone
    By the jealousy of others around her

    For her parasite sister, I had no respect
    Bound by her boredom, her pride to protect
    Countless visions of the other she'd reflect
    As a crutch for her scenes and her society

    Myself, for what I did, I cannot be excused
    The changes I was going through can't even be used
    For the lies that I told her in hopes not to lose
    The could-be dream-lover of my lifetime

    With unseen consciousness, I possessed in my grip
    A magnificent mantelpiece, though its heart being chipped
    Noticing not that I'd already slipped
    To the sin of love's false security

    From silhouetted anger to manufactured peace
    Answers of emptiness, voice vacancies
    'Till the tombstones of damage read me no questions but, "Please
    What's wrong and what's exactly the matter?"

    And so it did happen like it could have been foreseen
    The timeless explosion of fantasy's dream
    At the peak of the night, the king and the queen
    Tumbled all down into pieces

    "The tragic figure!" her sister did shout
    "Leave her alone, god damn you, get out!"
    And I in my armor, turning about
    And nailing her in the ruins of her pettiness

    Beneath a bare light bulb the plaster did pound
    Her sister and I in a screaming battleground
    And she in between, the victim of sound
    Soon shattered as a child to the shadows

    All is gone, all is gone, admit it, take flight
    I gagged in contradiction, tears blinding my sight
    My mind it was mangled, I ran into the night
    Leaving all of love's ashes behind me

    The wind knocks my window, the room it is wet
    The words to say I'm sorry, I haven't found yet
    I think of her often and hope whoever she's met
    Will be fully aware of how precious she is

    Ah, my friends from the prison, they ask unto me
    "How good, how good does it feel to be free?"
    And I answer them most mysteriously
    "Are birds free from the chains of the skyway?" Writer/s: BOB DYLAN
    Publisher: Universal Music Publishing Group
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 1

  • Johng from Mawell ya, but then he might never have written a truly angry yet beautiful song named Idiot Wind…he’s real angry thru most of the song, but at the end he confesses the love that once existed. a great BD song
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