Lyrics Ballad of Springhill - Barbara Dickson
In
the
town
of
Springhill,
Nova
Scotia,
Down
in
the
dark
of
The
Cumberland
Mine,
There′s
blood
on
the
coal
and
the
miners
lie,
In
the
roads
that
never
saw
sun
nor
sky,
Roads
that
never
saw
sun
nor
sky.
In
the
town
of
Springhill,
you
don't
sleep
easy,
Often
the
earth
will
tremble
and
roll,
When
the
earth
is
restless,
miners
die,
Bone
and
blood
is
the
price
of
coal.
In
the
town
of
Springhill,
Nova
Scotia,
Late
in
the
year
of
fifty-eight,
Day
still
comes
and
the
sun
still
shines,
But
it′s
dark
as
the
grave
in
the
Cumberland
Mine.
Down
at
the
coal
face,
miners
working,
Rattle
of
the
belt,
and
the
cutter's
blade,
Rumble
of
rock
and
the
walls
close
round
The
living
and
the
dead
men
two
miles
down.
Twelve
men
lay
two
miles
from
the
pitshaft,
Twelve
men
lay
in
the
dark
and
sang,
Long
hot
days
in
a
miner's
tomb,
It
was
three
feet
high
and
a
hundred
long.
Three
days
passed
and
the
lamps
gave
out,
And
Caleb
Rushton,
he
up
and
said:
"There′s
no
more
water
nor
light
nor
bread,
So
we′ll
live
on
hope
and
songs
instead."
Listen
for
the
shouts
of
the
bareface
miners,
Listen
through
the
rubble
for
a
rescue
team,
Six
hundred
feet
of
coal
and
a
slag,
Hope
imprisoned
in
a
three
foot
seam.
Eight
days
passed
and
some
were
rescued,
Leaving
the
dead
to
die
alone,
Through
all
their
lives
they
dug
a
grave,
Two
miles
of
earth
for
a
marking
stone
1 Fine Horseman
2 Love Hurts
3 Love Needs a Heart
4 Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?
5 Ballad of Springhill
6 Who Knows Where the Time Goes?
7 The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
8 All the Pretty Little Horses
9 The Dark End of the Street
10 Sandman's Coming
11 Just One Smile
12 Young Man Cut Down In His Prime
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