Lucinda Williams - Louisiana Story lyrics

[Lucinda Williams - Louisiana Story lyrics]

In the Deep South when I was growing up
Looking back on the sweetness
Looking back on the rough
The sun going down, crickets at night
Lawnmower sounds and mosquito bites
Swattin' at a fly, hearing the neighbors talk
So hot you could fry an egg on the sidewalk
Outside playing barefoot in the street
Tar would be sticking to the
Bottom of my feet
Running and chasing after the ice cream wagon
"Mama, can I have a quarter so
That I can get me one?"
On a good day Mama'd make
Us sweet coffee milk on bad days she cussed
When something got spilled
And Daddy taught the Bible
Lake Charles to Monroe
Shreveport to Slidell
Baton Rouge to Thibodaux
He chewed tobacco and spit out in a can
All the while hollering
"Don't let the screen door slam"

Her daddy's kind didn't spare the rod
Blinded by the fear and the wrath of the Lord
He'd call her a sinner, say
"you're going to hell"
Now finish your dinner and tell 'em you fell
And when the blood came, her mama told her
She was unclean and her mama would scold her
Mama always felt Christian guilt
And then put to bed under a homemade quilt

God knows it rains in Louisiana
But not enough to wash away
The sins of the father
And God knows Mama loved her daughter
And they say that blood is thicker than water

Down in the Deep South when I was growing up
Looking back on the sweetness
Looking back on the rough

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