TALKIN NEW YORK
Ramblin' outa the wild West,
Leavin' the towns I love
the best.
Thought I'd seen some ups
and down,
'Til I come into New York
town.
People goin' down to the
ground,
Buildings goin' up to the
sky.
Wintertime in New York town,
The wind blowin' snow around.
Walk around with nowhere
to go,
Somebody could freeze right
to the bone.
I froze right to the bone.
New York Times said it was
the coldest winter
in seventeen years;
I didn't feel so cold then.
I swung on to my old guitar,
Grabbed hold of a subway
car,
And after a rocking, reeling,
rolling ride,
I landed up on the downtown
side;
Greenwich Village.
I walked down there and ended
up
In one of them coffee-houses
on the block.
Got on the stage to sing
and play,
Man there said, "Come back
some other day,
You sound like a hillbilly;
We want folk singers here."
Well, I got a harmonica job,
begun to play,
Blowin' my lungs out for
a dollar a day.
I blowed inside out and upside
down.
The man there said he loved
m' sound,
He was ravin' about how he
loved m' sound;
Dollar a day's worth.
And after weeks and weeks
of hangin' around,
I finally got a job in New
York town,
In a bigger place, bigger
money too,
Even joined the union and
paid m' dues.
Now, a very great man once
said
That some people rob you
with a fountain pen.
It didn't take too long to
find out
Just what he was talkin'
about.
A lot of people don't have
much food on their
table,
But they got a lot of forks
n' knives,
And they gotta cut somethin'.
So one mornin' when the sun
was warm,
I rambled out of New York
town.
Pulled my cap down over my
eyes
And headed out for the western
skies.
So long, New York.
Howdy, East Orange.
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