DamnLyrics - The center provides all the lyrics

Haunted House - John Anderson



     
Page format: Left Center Right
Direct link:
BB code:
Embed:

Haunted House Lyrics


I just moved in the new house today
Moving was hard but I got squared away
Bell started ringin' and chains clanged loud
I knew I'd move in a haunted house.
Still it made up my mind to stay
And nothin' was a gonna drive me away
When I seen somethin' that gave me the creeps
And one big eye and two big feet.
I stood right still and I did it freeze
He just strolled right up to me
Made a noise that sounds like a drum
Said, "Don't be here when the morning comes."
I said, "Yes, I'll be here when the morning comes
I'll be right here and I ain't gonna run
I bought this house so you know I'm boss

Ain't no haint gonna run me off."
In the kitchen my stove was a-blazing hot
The coffee was boilin' in the pot
Grease had melted in the pan
I had a hunk o' meat in my hand.
From out of space there sat a man
On the hot stove with the pots and pans
"Say that hot," I began to shout
He drank a hot coffee right from the spout.
He ate the raw meat right from my hand
And drank the hot grease from the frying pan
He looked at me and said "You better run
And don't be here when the morning comes."
I said, "Yes, I'll be here when the morning comes
I'll be right here and I ain't gonna run
I bought this house so you know I'm boss
Ain't no haint gonna run me off."...
---
Lyrics submitted by Steven Dickerso.

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
1. John Anderson (born December 13, 1954 in Apopka, Florida) is a country singer and musician. He scored hits in the early 1980s with songs such as "Swingin'," "Your Lyin' Blue Eyes," "Black Sheep" and the Billy Joe Shaver-composed "I'm Just an Old Chunk of Coal." His career hit a dry spell for several years until 1991, when his single "Straight Tequila Night" came out. Subsequent hits included "Money In The Bank" and "Seminole Wind." The latter would become Florida's unofficial state anthem.

Anderson makes his home in Smithville, Tennessee, approximately 50 miles southeast of Nashville.



User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License and may also be available under the GNU FDL.

View All

John Anderson