On the way out of town on Old Walton Road
 
 There's a twenty foot rusty bull
 
 With a ring right through it's nose
 
 If you ask all the folks in town
 
 Some of them remember but
 
 Most of them don't
 
 He guards the entrance to the junkyard
 
 Where my daddy goes
 
  
  His eyes fill my heart with dread
 
 And he visits me while I lie in my bed
 
 He says: Your daddy can't undo what's done
 
 And forty years later I'm still trying to run
 
 I wake her up in the middle of the night
 
 I plead with her and I present my plight
 
 But I see a weary melancholy in her face
 
 And I understand that the bull is right
  
 
 And the stairs still creak at the Five and Dime
 
 And it smells like something set apart from time
 
 And I see you smiling at the Tastee-Freez
 
 And the Sun's goin' down behind the Maple trees
  
 
 And the stairs still creak at the Five and Dime
 
 And it smells like something set apart from time
 
 And I see you smiling at the Tastee-Freez
 
 And the Sun's goin' down behind the Maple trees
 
 Now the bull stands under ice and snow
  
 
 And the Winter offers no reprieve
 
 The Moon is tangled up in the branches of the trees
 
 And he won't let me leave
 
 Spring is the promise that never came
 
 The bull tightens his grip and I curse his name
 
 Now every morning is a harsh reminder
 
 That everything is the same
  
 
 And the stairs still creak at the Five and Dime
 
 And it smells like something set apart from time
 
 And I see you smiling at the Tastee-Freez
 
 And the Sun's goin' down behind the Maple trees
 
 And the stairs still creak at the Five and Dime
 
 And it smells like something set apart from time
 
 And I see you smiling at the Tastee-Freez
 
 And the Sun's goin' down behind the Maple trees