There was a pretty girl
From some small suburb of Dallas
And she came up to New York with a dream
In the confusion and the noise
All of her beauty and her poise
Turned gray like snow beside the city street
She met a boy named Steven
They made love in his apartment
In a second story walk up out in Queens
And the thing she hoped to find
Beneath him on that August night
Was the farthest thing from her
As she dressed to leave
So she hides her eyes
Says a slow goodbye
Swears by the morning light sheâll be fine
At a wedding in Connecticut
The mother of the bride
Daydreams about her husband whoâs just passed
She stands to give a toast
She says âthe only thing I know
Is when you find a love thatâs worth it, make it lastâ
So she chokes back to tears
Speaks of all her daughterâs years
Thirty Christmases of memories that she keeps
And the speech was sad and sweet
She kisses guests as they all leave
Then heads up to her hotel room to weep
So she bides her time
And says a slow goodbye
Swears by the morning light sheâll be fine
Yea, she hides her eyes
And though itâs hard some nights
Sheâd take her own sweet time, sheâll be fine
A welder who spent twenty years
Working in an auto plant
Gets laid off on a Thursday afternoon
And he grips the 45
That rests in the glove box when he drives
Then he puts the gun away
And wonders what to do
So he parks in his driveway
And head against the steel meal
Tries to think of what to tell his wife
And in the kitchen he explains
And swears theyâll be okay
And she says âyouâre the only thing I need in this lifeâ
So he bides his time
And says a slow goodbye
Swears by the morning light heâll be fine
Yea, he hides his eyes
And though itâs hard some nights
Heâd take her own sweet time, heâll be fine