(Spoken)
 
 That's him in the corner of social oblivion
 
 Encompassed by the sweet sense of freedom
 
 That only borders the aura of deep cerebral gouges
 
 Buried in each beat of the heart he was once proud to home
 
 If only his substance held a higher level of potence
 
 He might be able to drown the portion of his mind
 
 Which is trapped in the infinite hoard
 
 Of his 1972 through '74 tour through the flames of this hell
 
  
  Sometimes gunfire is brighter than the sunshine
 
 And sometimes a child's scream influences every dream
 
 Sometimes we fool ourselves into thinking we've moved on
 
 But no way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen
 
 No way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen
 
 No way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen
 
 No way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen
 
 No way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen
  
 
 It's now twenty-five years later, he's on the brink of forty-three
 
 Still searching for sanity, surveying the floor of his distorted sea
 
 He rememebers high-school friends joking about the war
 
 Never knew what mom was crying for (Never knew what mom was crying for)
 
 The other piece that shines in his mind was a divine first love
 
 Sewn-made, beauty, brown-eyed queen he left behind
 
 He remembers holding her tight, watching the sunset at shore
 
 Never knew what she was crying for (Never knew what she was crying for)
 
 He got the letter in the mail by the middle of his summer
 
 Wouldn't have had to go if it wasn't for his newborn brother
 
 He was barely eighteen, murdering people even younger
 
 And he still ducks and covers every time he hears the thunder
 
 He still hears the screams, smells the flesh, tastes the death
 
 Sees the blood, feels the pain, what's to gain, nothing's left
 
 But the slug that remains in his right calf
 
 The bullet laughs every time he cries, and it drives him mad
 
 Trying to sleep, but the visions give him a cold sweat
 
 The war's been over for two decades, but he still hasn't been home yet
 
 And every day he waits and strains to supress his guilt
 
 And forget the horror and the violence; the "kill or be killed"
 
 Fists, they always clenched; teeth, they always grinding
 
 Real life is lost and in a bottle he tries to find it
 
 "It's not fair," he mumbles through a nightmare
 
 Only in a fight for two years and wound up spending his whole life there
  
 
 (Chorus)
 
 He was face to face with the devil for the welfare of his country
 
 Now he's straining to live but his conscience won't let him
 
 It ain't flashbacks, you have to understand the tragedy, see
 
 He left the war, but the war never left him, see
 
 He left the war, but the war never left him, see
 
 He left the war, but the war never left him, see
 
 He left the war, but the war never left him, see
 
 He left the war...
  
 
 It's now twenty-five years later, he's on the edge of a park bench
 
 He asked God for hope and found his source non-existant
 
 He sits in the shadows, because the sun burns no more
 
 Now he knows what mom was crying for (Now he knows what mom was crying for)
 
 I used to watch old man in the park
 
 The sights slowly drove fright through my heart
 
 Wishing I could help but not knowing where to start
 
 I'd walk away, curse the world, gush some love and curse some more
 
 Now you know who I've been crying for (Now you know who I've been crying
 
 for)
 
 He threw his medals in the river but they sunk alone
 
 Put shades on his eyes to hide it from the warzone in the sky
 
 He tried to slit his wrists about a month ago
 
 But he's seen so much death, he's scared to life of suicide
 
 If there was only some way he could escape this penitentiary
 
 Goals get bigger and figures it'll chase away his memory
 
 But the dreams only worsen, the scenes almost burst in
 
 He recalls how training took away his right to be a person
 
 Put a gun in his hand, left him to die for the land
 
 The plan was the murder of man (The plan was the murder of man)
 
 Politicians have a dispute to decide to send in troops
 
 But the truth is they just don't understand (They just don't understand)
 
 Now he's running out of time, and running out of energy
 
 But 'til the last day he will fight for the murder of his memories
 
 And although he never got rid of his dog-tags
 
 He still wishes they'd have sent his parents an American flag
  
 
 (Chorus)
  
 
 Sometimes gunfire is brighter than the sunshine
 
 And sometimes a child's scream influences every dream
 
 Sometimes we fool ourselves into thinking we've moved on
 
 But no way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen
 
 No way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen
 
 No way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen
 
 No way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen
 
 No way, nohow, do we ever forget what we've seen