San Antonio Rose
Melodic Reverie: Love and Longing in San AntoneLyrics
Deep within my heart lies a melody,
Expressing a profound emotion or sentiment within me.
A song of old San Antone.
Referring to a song associated with San Antonio.
Where in dreams I live with a memory,
Living in a dream with a nostalgic recollection.
Beneath the stars, all alone.
Under the stars, feeling solitary.
Well it was there I found, beside the Alamo,
Discovering enchanting experiences by the Alamo.
Enchantments strange as the blue up above.
Describing unusual and captivating things as the sky.
For that moonlit pass, that only he would know,
Referring to a moonlit pathway known to a specific person.
Still hears my broken song of love.
Expressing that the broken song of love is still heard there.
Moon in all your splendor, known only to my heart,
Addressing the moon, asking it to reveal its splendor.
Call back my rose, rose of San Antone.
Calling for the return of a beloved person, the rose of San Antone.
Lips so sweet and tender, like petals falling apart,
Describing the sweetness and fragility of lips.
Speak once again of my love, my own.
Requesting the person to speak again of their love.
Broken song, empty words I know,
Acknowledging the brokenness of the song and empty words.
Still live in my heart all alone.
Emphasizing that the broken song still resides in the heart.
For that moonlit pass by the Alamo,
Referring again to the moonlit pathway by the Alamo.
And rose, my rose of San Antone.
Mentioning the rose, symbolizing the love of San Antone.
Broken song, empty words I know,
Reiterating the acknowledgment of a broken song and empty words.
Still live in my heart all alone.
Reaffirming that these sentiments persist in the heart.
For that moonlit pass by the Alamo.
Repeating the reference to the moonlit pass by the Alamo.
And rose, my rose of San Antone.
Reemphasizing the significance of the rose of San Antone.
And rose, my rose of San Antone.
Final repetition of the rose's importance in San Antone.
And rose, my rose of San Antone.
Concluding with a final mention of the rose in San Antone.
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