A song dedicated to Joe Hill , the great social shaker and songwriter killed by the State of Utah in 1915,
Tom Joad , the protagonist of "The Grapes of Wrath" by John Steinbeck,
Gene Debs (1855-1926), historical leader of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
and Ammon Hennacy (1893-1970), a pacifist and anarchist Christian who was the founder of the "Joe Hill House",
home of the Catholic Worker Movement in Salt Lake City
[Verse 1]
E B
Goodbye, Joe Hill, we've had some good times here.
E
I wish you could stay around for just another year.
A
But the battle line keeps movin' and I know that you can't stay.
B E
I guess sometimes it just works out that way.
[Verse 2]
B
Goodbye, Tom Joad, we'll meet, I don't know where.
E
We're a better kind of people for knowin' you were here.
A
It was a damn good fight, Tom, but we lost and that's a shame;
B E
I'm glad we stood and fought it, all the same.
[Verse 3]
E
Goodbye, Gene Debs, I know just where you'll be:
B A E
"While there's a man in prison, my soul can not be free."
A
Well, Gene, you tried to change them, but they beat you in the end;
D#m E
I'm glad that we had you for a friend.
[Verse 4]
E B
And Ammon, you old rebel, it's just another round.
A E
Takes more than politicians to keep a rebel down.
A
There's one thing I know for certain, I swear by God it's true:
B E
This blue-nosed town ain't seen the last of you.
[Verse 5]
E
So long, Joe Hill. So long, but not goodbye.
B A E
You're off to teach some grafters how to sizzle and to fry.
A
But someday we're going to need you Joe, you and all your friends,
B E
We'll never have to say goodbye again.