There's a word for missing places That can never be the same And I can't find it on my tongue now, But it echoes in my brain And I never knew that ghost towns Could feel quite this way Alive for everybody else but I feel empty just the same But I know it like I know how the carpet stains with clay Rust red from the iron running through it, Like it's running in my veins As far as second chances, Guess you all could rewrite your fate But I know that when I die I'll be the last one of my name So lay me down in the water when the creek is running clear Baptize me with the crawfish and the catfish and the deer And it was never quite that simple, But it's held there in my mind It was Georgia, yea it was mine I have my father's stubborn blood And my mother's anxious mind I am the last remaining monument To things we've lost in time And though there's fresh new paint and finishing's These walls could never lie They hold the remnants of a family from a not-so-distant life Sometimes there's questions you don't ask For fear of learning who was right For fear of seeing that the world was Never neatly black and white They say redemption isn't something You could ever earn or buy But Earth's a bare-knuckle boxing match, A winner-take-all fight So may we rise like the mountains Where they're whispering of gold No they may not be the highest, But they're gentle and they're old And you can't want it when you have it But I'm missing it with time It was Georgia, yea it was mine