Parted from and missing a lover, a man think back over the past when he was Next to You. (her). The man of the tale is a Brit. Our Englishman happily visits New York. Did he meet her there? We don’t know. It’s only a story. We’ll say he did. And every little thing she does is magic. But oh, he has committed a faux pas–sounds like a major faux pas–and he’s hanging his head, wondering if she will be his ain true love. Meanwhile she is perhaps doing what she always has and earning her bucks or perhaps miffed, she’s just out visiting others and he feels betrayed. Poetic license. She’s back and he’s happy, recalling when we dance. But things still don’t work out and it’s the end of the game. He’s left burning for her while they’re both off busy working the black seam. She was too good for him anyhow. Still he wants his pirate queen back. She goes straight to his heart on bonus tracks but he wonders why he should cry for her and feels down whenever he says her name on bonus tracks. A creative little tale with a few stretches that he probably didn’t even notice when he was putting tracks for Symphonicities together because it’s not the tale of how he and his lovely wife met.
How clever of you, Al. I was amused.
Merci, my dear ...
Parted from and missing a lover, a man think back over the past when he was Next to You. (her). The man of the tale is a Brit. Our Englishman happily visits New York. Did he meet her there? We don’t know. It’s only a story. We’ll say he did. And every little thing she does is magic. But oh, he has committed a faux pas–sounds like a major faux pas–and he’s hanging his head, wondering if she will be his ain true love. Meanwhile she is perhaps doing what she always has and earning her bucks or perhaps miffed, she’s just out visiting others and he feels betrayed. Poetic license. She’s back and he’s happy, recalling when we dance. But things still don’t work out and it’s the end of the game. He’s left burning for her while they’re both off busy working the black seam. She was too good for him anyhow. Still he wants his pirate queen back. She goes straight to his heart on bonus tracks but he wonders why he should cry for her and feels down whenever he says her name on bonus tracks. A creative little tale with a few stretches that he probably didn’t even notice when he was putting tracks for Symphonicities together because it’s not the tale of how he and his lovely wife met.
How clever of you, Al. I was amused.
Merci, my dear ...