In our days we will live
Like our ghosts will live
Pitching glass at the cornfield crows
And folding clothes

Like stubborn boys across the room
We'll keep everything
Grandma's gun, and the black bear claw
That took her dog

When sister Laurie says "Amen"
We won't hear anything
The ten-car train will take that word
That fledgling bird

And the falling house across the way
It'll keep everything
The baby's breath, our bravery wasted
And our shame

And we'll undress beside the ashes of the fire
Both our tender bellies bound in baling wire
All the more a pair of underwater pearls
Than the oak tree and its Resurrection Fern

In our days we will say
What our ghosts will say
We gave the world what it saw fit
But what'd we get?

Like stubborn boys with big green eyes
We'll see everything
In the timid shade of the autumn leaves
And the buzzard's wing

And we'll undress beside the ashes of the fire
Our tender bellies all wound around in baling wire
All the more a pair of underwater pearls
Than the oak tree and his Resurrection Fern


Lyrics submitted by Mellow_Harsher, edited by spdodger

Resurrection Fern Lyrics as written by Samuel Ervin Beam

Lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

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Resurrection Fern song meanings
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    General Comment

    So far I'm torn between thinking this is either about a couple who lost their baby and are mourning/healing over the years, or it's about two boys who fell in love young and didn't end up together. Both ideas fit the lyrics perfectly. The song is light and gives me a sense of hope, even if this about loss. The overall point I'm taking from this is that you have to love what you have-when you have it. Everything changes. Things don't always end up the way you want them to, but you will always remember the love you felt for that short time when everything was right and uncomplicated.

    3wolveshirton April 09, 2010   Link

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