Read Working Girl Blues Online
Authors: Hazel Dickens
I wrote this song in 1981 after reading a true story in the newspaper about this grower down in Florida who hired a lot of migrant workers to work for him picking fruit. He also let children work long hours in the hot sun with very little pay. The article mentioned a little eleven-year-old boy named Lenaldo. Lenaldo got up at dawn and worked all day in the fields picking strawberries. The grower paid him five cents a box, but strawberries retailed for about eight times that much, and all the money went to the grower. The migrants barely had enough to eat or to pay their rent. That's why the kid had to work. The parents needed the extra money to pay bills. Lenaldo never had leisure time like other kids to run and play. His days spent in the fields were long and exhausting. They got home at dusk, and the mother who had also been in the fields cooked supper. After that was over, it was time to get ready for bed and the next day. They had to be up and ready to go by dawn. After I read that article, it stayed on my mind until I finally had to write a song about it.
Little Lenaldo he's only eleven years old
He gets up at dawn to work in the fields all day
For a mean boss man, who'll abuse and never think twice
He's known for cheap labor and a heart that's cold as ice
Poor little Lenaldo, poor little ragged child
Poor little child so young and so mild
Oh what's to become of him
Little Lenaldo no time ever to run and play
Work is barely finished 'till it's time to start another day
Grey-haired little children growing old before their time
Their dreams lay dying they just rotted on the vine
How can it be we stand and just look away
Pretend not to see this man destroy a little child
In the fields of plenty starving out his time
But for chance or blessings
He could be a child of yours or mine
Poor little Lenaldo, poor little ragged child
Poor little child so young and so mild
Oh what's to become of him
Underpaid, underfed, he's worked like a dog everyday
Poor little child so young and so mild
Oh what's to become of him?
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This song was written in the late '60s for a sister, a very sweet and dear soul, who however always seemed to choose the wrong people to have a lasting relationship with. There always seemed to be a “loser” waiting in the wings to take advantage of her. Unfortunately, she never learned to tell them apart.
Chorus:
Down where the beer and wine and the liquor flows
Down along sorrow streets where all her misery grows
Searching for a home I know she'll never find
Searching for a little love the kind she's never had
Her fears she hides within her eyes, the torment in her soul
The loved ones who've forgotten her don't need her no more
The demons from some hellish world, who speak to her so low
And bid her come into their world and be lost forever more
Her loved ones turn from her in shame the scorn deep in their eyes
They'll never claim part of the blame, they don't want her around
So she turns to a stranger for love at any cost
She's waiting for tomorrow, but tomorrow's already lost
They'll come for her tomorrow, they'll lock her up awhile
Until she can stand alone and learn again to smile
And then she'll start all over, she'll walk the streets downtown
Where plenty of men are just waiting to help and drag her down
Repeat Chorus
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I had been writing on this song for quite a while before I finished it in 1996. I'd leave it and come back to it, but couldn't seem to get anywhere with it until I started playing around with a new melody and chord pattern. Then I got more excited about finishing it. Since I'm a traditional singer, I'm basically a G/C/D person. So this new chord structure was a little different, and it took a while to get used to. Once I got over the fact that I wasn't being
too unfaithful to the “old school,” the old way of doing things, I started to like the new tune much better, and I realized I'd been getting in my own way. It also freed me up to be able to write the third verse, which is probably my favorite in the whole song.
My heart's been pounded with grief and sorrow
My tears have lingered too long
Once bedded in clover now the weeds have took over
And I can't find your love anymore
Chorus:
For love comes early or love comes too late
Or love don't come at all
Come back to me when love runs truer
And your heart melts like the snow
I followed your dreams down long lonesome highways
To places where love had no home
But sorrow soon found us wrapped heartache around us
All our fields were overgrown
Somewhere out on some wild brushy mountain
There are wild flowers the eye has never seen
Like places in my heart where you never dared to wander
And love has waited long to be set free
Repeat Chorus
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A lot of the mines have shut down around where I came from in West Virginia, and so many other businesses were forced to close as well. A lot of boomtowns shrunk in size and discontinued some city services like local
transportation. Small coal camps became ghost towns compared to their heyday. When I was younger, I could take the train or bus right to my home-town. Now when I take the train, I have to get off twenty-nine miles from my destination, and it only runs three days a week. Strangely enough, those of us who were born and raised there still call it home and try to visit as often as we canâwhich reminds me of a time back in the seventies when I was playing a festival in West Virginia. After it was over, a friend and I decided that we would attend this rally put on by the coal miners while they were on strike. It was way out on some little country road in the middle of nowhere near the mines. I was working a day job up north in the city and playing music on the weekends, so I had not been home to West Virginia in a longtime. As we drove deeper and deeper into the mountains, down tree-lined roads along the river's edge, a great wave of nostalgia swept over me. I was emotionally moved by being here in this mountainous terrain. It felt good to be surrounded by mountains so close I could almost reach out and touch them, comforting me with a sense of place and belonging, which I had not felt in a longtime, connecting me to my native roots. No longer was I confused about where home wasâI
was
home!
There ain't much that's left there that ain't all run-down
Gone are the echoes of old familiar sounds
Of families that's scattered, parted and gone
And left a lot of good things to wither away back home
Chorus:
Can't you feel those hills around you
Can't you feel a touch of home
And don't you wish you'd never gone
There are some things memories can't bring home
Hills of home hills of home, families scattered off and gone
These old hills that've been passed by
Well they've seen a lot of leaving in their time
Old familiar dirt roads winds through the piney glades
Where all the longings of childhood dreams where made
The flowery paths the mossy mounds where I could run and play
Never a care to cross my mind all the livelong day
Repeat Chorus
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This song was written in the late sixties and early seventies. I was heavy into the old-time and bluegrass sound, like the Stanleys, Monroe, Don Reno and Red Smiley, the Louvin Brothers, Osborne Brothers, Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper, Jim and Jesseâthe list goes on. I knew most of the songs of that period by heart. I think all of that strong material from the fifties, sixties, and seventies spurred me on to start writing my own songs. Up until that time I had written only a few songs. I became more and more adventurous in the seventies and eighties and more prolific as a songwriter. This song came out of that period. I recorded it on a CD that came out in 1998 called “Heart of a Singer.” The song was used on a movie soundtrack,
Evidence of Blood,
on cable TV a couple of years ago. I have never seen the movie.
Old river you're wide you're deep and cold
You make a lonesome old sound as onward you roll
'Neath the crest of your waves I know I could sleep
And forget all this sorrow he's brought to me
Many's the time and many's the night
We sat here talking making things right
You heard every vow you heard all our plans
Old river I know that you understand
The dawn is breaking on sea and on land
As I write my farewell upon your sand
Your waves will embrace me my body you'll claim
Old river old river you're calling my name
Oh the ways of love is oft times bold
Like the hearts of lovers when love turns cold
River old river your depths dark and deep
In a watery grave forever I'll sleep
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