She grew up on the mountain, a hundred miles from town And then one day Father went away, and never did come home. Mother said 'that coward was scared of work is all' But undeterred Indy thought she heard her Father's lonesome call...
Hey hey Indianna! You'd better watch what you say! Winter's gone and the thaw has come To wash your tears away.
The meanness in her mother meant the work was always hard With crops to tend and with clothes to mend, and chickens in the yard. She washed out in the open, in a frozen water butt A stack of wood in the corner stood, waiting to get cut.
Hey hey Indianna! You'd better watch what you say! Winter's gone and the thaw has come To wash your tears away.
She thought she heard her Father's voice in the softly falling snow Whisper 'I was killed at your mother's will. The woman's got to go! She heard him in the forest, and she heard him in the stream She could even hear when she blocked her ears, and when her mother screamed...
Hey hey Indianna! You'd better watch what you say! Winter's gone and the thaw has come To wash your tears away.
She went to get her father's axe, but not for chopping wood She turned instead to the stairs that lead to where her Mother stood. She said 'Mother, why did you do it? And why'd you lie to me?' And with just one swing set the birds to sing, and Indy to be free...
Hey hey Indianna! You'd better watch what you say! Winter's gone and the thaw has come To wash your tears away.Teksty umieszczone na naszej stronie są własnością wytwórni, wykonawców, osób mających do nich prawa.