Read Working Girl Blues Online
Authors: Hazel Dickens
As for me and my part in all this, I was overcome with compassion and empathy for these poor souls. I had never been in a room before with so many poor and disabled people. I was raised the same way as they were, so I knew of their hardships and suffering. We had buried my oldest brother a few years before, the one who died of black lung and without benefits. Welfare had to pay for his benefits. So when I got up to sing my song “Black Lung,” I was filled with compassion as I looked out at the carnage of human wreckage the wealthy coal companies had left behind for someone else to
pick up and care for. I was so moved by that experience that I went home and wrote “Clay County Miner.” I got a chance to sing it to them when they came to Washington to lobby for their benefits. It was a rare moment and one that time has not dimmed! This group of brave men went on to organize the Kentucky Black Lung Association.
He's a poor man 'cause mining's all he's known
And miners don't get rich loadin' coal
He's a sick man 'cause that coal dust took its stand
But he don't expect to get no help from that operator man
Chorus:
Well it's good-bye old-timer, I guess our time has come
Those waterholes that dirty coal dust eatin' up our lungs
We'll leave this world just as poor as the day we saw the sun
Well it's good-bye old-timer all your mining is done
I remember the time when I could load more coal than any man
Now my health is gone buried in, down in that dirty ground
And they've taken away my rights and privilege to be a man
But I know that I can't tell all that to that operator man
Remember old-timer when we were little kids
And we'd talk about mining days when we got grown and big
But now we're old broken men they don't need us around
Though we gave our lives to make them rich they won't give us a dime
Repeat Chorus
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The inspiration for this song came sometime in 2002 after an evening spent with an old friend over dinner and then listening to music. We had a lot to
talk about since we both are survivors in the male-dominated world of blue-grass. We filled each other in on our business and social lives, and then the conversation turned to “men” and we both readily agreed that a
good man is hard to find.
But somehow here on planet Earth she was able to snag one! We spoke a lot about relationships, band-wise and in our private lives, and I said how lucky she was to have such a special supportive relationship not only at home but on the road as well. That part of the conversation lingered with me, and the next day as I was preparing my lunch I began singing the chorus to this song right out of the blue. After lunch, I got my guitar and tape machine and wrote this song in two hours. It's the first positive love song I've ever written. It was such a nice experience, and I may try it again!
I was wandering along life's highway
Lost and lonely as one could be
Looking for my own true lover
One I thought I would never see
Bridge:
Just when I thought I'd never know love
Just when my dreams all fell apart
I look up from the deepening shadows
And you were standing next to my heart
Chorus:
Bless your heart you are my darling
Bless your soul you are the one
Bless the fate that brought you to me
At last I found my heart's own love
Sometimes we wander like lonely pilgrims
Like old soldiers who long for home
Hoping when our journey's ended
We'll find the sweetest peace we've known
Repeat Bridge and Chorus
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I started writing this song in 2002 during all of those corporate scandals involving white-collar crooks stealing off the very people they were getting paid to protect. Talk about “vapors”âthey put the cows to shame! I also kept hearing stories from people who had been laid off because the factory or business had left the U.S. and moved south of the border, leaving behind thousands upon thousands of decent hardworking people who'd spent a good part and sometimes all of their youth slaving for these money-grubbing factory owners. It came home to me when one of my nieces fell prey to the same injustice. She had spent years working in this factory and had worked her way up to being in charge of several people. The boss asked her to train a new crop of workers. She did and thought nothing about it, until she got her notice that she was laid off. They closed the factory and took their new youthful employees, freshly trained by my niece, and moved south of the border. What
really
stuck in my craw was that they
used
her like a worn-out mop. They mopped up the floor with her and then threw her away. She was and is a loyal, decent, salt-of-the-earth-type person. It all impacted on her well-being, now pushing sixty-some and in failing health. They left her high and dryâno insurance, no retirement, no nothing. There are a million stories like this all over the country. Money, power, and greed are like incurable diseases once you become consumed by them. You can't get rid of them. The more you get, the more you want. The side effects are the lives they wreck. The pity is that they leave no one behind to clean up the wreckage.
Well you don't know my name
But you sure know my face
You've seen me a million times
In some laboring place
Although we're worlds apart
I'm in your daily plan
For I bring you fame and fortune
With my own two working hands
We're America's poor
Oh yes, we're living right here
And poverty's door
It just won't hold anymore
No name or no face
We have lost our place
We fell through the cracks
Looking for the tracks
Of the American dream
There's a man on the corner
With a tin cup in his hand
Though he fought in two wars
His nightmares are still Vietnam
They gave him medals and promises
Now the streets and a shelter's his home
He just stands there in rags
With his medals and begs
And wonders what on Earth went wrong
All the factories are closing, going down where labor is cheap
And they've cheated their workers, out of pensions and their lifelong dreams
Too old to start over, they will lose everything that they own
But south of the border a new factory's in order
To cheat their workers again
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This song was written in 1980 for people like Sarah Ogan Gunning, Nimrod Workman, and Florence Reece, about how they paved the road that a lot of us have walked on. They're the kind of people I look to when I need faith by my side. I got to sing it for Florence Reece on her eighty-fifth birthday.
Your face reads like a history book, all lined with worried years
It tells of the roads that you have paved, with sacrifice and tears
The hard times have marked you with scars of the past
You are freedom's disciple for the working class
Yes you are freedom's disciple my courage and my pride
It's you that I look to when I need faith by my side
It's you that I worship and not some idol pawn
It's your book of life I read from for the strength to carry on
So now we are walking on the roads, 'cause you spilled your blood and tears
Yes we've been walking in your tracksâyour footsteps for years
For all the hurts you've suffered, well we won't let you down
We will die to protect the freedom that you found
Yes freedom's a little bit closer, because you stood your ground
You didn't run when they took their guns and tried to mow you down
Without you the union would be a thing of the past
For you are freedom's disciple for the working class
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I wrote this song in 1976, but unfortunately, it's as true today as it was then. It's shameful to see so many homeless people roaming the streets of one of the richest countries in the world, begging for handouts, barely existing, always living beneath their dignity, lost in the bowels of society. It seems a country as rich as this could do a better job of taking care of its own. We have a real crisis in this countryâin denial about the homeless, the abused and neglected children, the abused and neglected elderly, the millions of uninsured hardworking people, the pharmaceutical industry that lines its pockets while picking ours, our doctors who have vested interests in those companies, and our leaders who get big payoffs and let them get away with it. It's time to wake up. The fox is in the henhouse! And it looks like he won't be evicted anytime soon.
Well they're sleeping in the streets all across this nation
Anywhere they can lay their weary bodies down
Homeless and hungry they're herded like cattle
To the soup lines and the kitchens where the handouts are found
Oh the crying of the dying of the people in need
How long must they suffer before you hear their plea
One crumb from your loaf would feed a starving soul
One little coin from your pot of gold
Yes they're sleeping in the streets all across this nation
From every walk of life that you can name
While greedy politicians and white-collar cheaters
Are stealing and robbing hardworking people blind
Well they're made to feel so worthless no good and lazy
By a system that took away their jobs
But when it comes to sacrifice, cutbacks, and layoffs
It's never big corporations, it's the people who lose
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