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A Month Of Sundays

I used to work for Harvester

I used to use my hands

I used to make the tractors and the combines that plowed and harvested

This great land

Now I see my handiwork on the block everywhere I turn

And I see the clouds 'cross the weathered faces and I watch the harvest burnI quit the plant in '57

Had some time for farmin' then

Banks back then was lendin' money

The banker was the farmer's friend

And I've seen dog days and dusty days;

Late spring snow and early fall sleet;

I've held the leather reins in my hands and felt the soft ground under my feet

Between the hot dry weather and the taxes, and the Cold War it's been hard

To make ends meet

But I always kept the clothes on our backs;

I always put the shoes on our feetMy grandson, he comes home from college

He says, "We get the government we deserve."

My son-in-law just shakes his head and says, "That little punk, he never

Had to serve."

And I sit here in the shadow of the suburbs and look out across these

Empty fields

I sit here in earshot of the bypass and all night I listen to the rushin'

Of the wheelsThe big boys, they all got computers; got incorporated, too

Me, I just know how to raise things

That was all I ever knew

Now, it all comes down to numbers

Now I'm glad that I have quit

Folks these days just don't do nothin' simply for the love of it

Songwriters

HENLEY, DONPublished by

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