|
Baby I know that we've got trouble in the fields |
|
When the bankers swarm like locust out there turning away our yield |
|
The trains roll by our silos, silver in the rain |
|
They leave our pockets full of nothing |
|
But our dreams and the golden grain |
|
Have you seen the folks in line downtown at the station |
|
They're all buying their ticket out and talking the great depression |
|
Our parents had their hard times fifty years ago |
|
When they stood out in these empty fields in dust as deep as snow |
|
And all this trouble in our fields |
|
If this rain can fall, these wounds can heal |
|
They'll never take our native soil |
|
But if we sell that new John Deere |
|
And then we'll work these crops with sweat and tears |
|
You'll be the mule I'll be the plow |
|
Come harvest time we'll work it out |
|
There's still a lotta love, here in these troubled fields |
|
There's a book up on the shelf about the dust bowl days |
|
And there's a little bit of you and a little bit of me |
|
In the photos on every page |
|
Now our children live in the city and they rest upon our shoulders |
|
They never want the rain to fall or the weather to get colder |
|
And all this trouble in our fields |
|
If this rain can fall, these wounds can heal |
|
They'll never take our native soil |
|
But if we sell that new John Deere |
|
And then we'll work these crops with sweat and tears |
|
You'll be the mule I'll be the plow |
|
Come harvest time we'll work it out |
|
There's still a lotta love, here in these troubled fields |
|
You'll be the mule I'll be the plow |
|
Come harvest time we'll work it out |
|
There's still a lotta love, here in these troubled fields |