Parcheesi is a brand-name American adaptation of the Indian cross and circle board game Pachisi, published by Parker Brothers and Winning Moves. Created in India perhaps as early as A.D. 500, Pachisi is called the Royal Game of India because royalty used servants of the royal household adorned in colored costumes as game pieces on large outdoor boards. Such a court is preserved at the Fatehpur Sikri. The game and its variants are known worldwide. A similar game called Parchís is popular in Spain and northern Morocco.Parqués is its Colombian variant. A version is available in the United Kingdom under the name of Ludo.
Parcheesi is typically played with two dice, four pawns per player and a board with a track around the outside, four corner spaces and four "home paths" leading to a central end space. The most popular Parcheesi boards in America have 68 spaces around the edge of the board, 12 of which are darkened "safe spaces" where a piece cannot be captured. The goal of the game is to move all of one's pawns "home" to the center space.
Show me love, make me afraid
Push me around again
You paint a picture, throw me on the wall
Does it make you happy now?
All of my life where have you been?
When I've been alone in this darkness
No matter how hard I try, it slips away
Everything precious, in my life
Your feelings hurt, I'm feeling worse
You can't accept me for who I am
You put me in your corner, a box to make me feel
like you're all I ever had
And all of my life, where have you been?
When I've been alone in this darkness
No matter how hard I try, it slips away
Everything precious, in my life
It rains and it pours, you're wanting more
You gave me less than words express
And all of my life, where have you been?
When I've been alone in this darkness
No matter how hard I try, it slips away