Lyrics Vanzetti's Letter - Woody Guthrie
The
year,
it
is
1927,
an′
the
day
is
the
third
day
of
May;
Town
is
the
city
called
Boston,
an'
our
address
this
dark
Dedham
jail.
To
your
honor,
the
Governor
Fuller,
to
the
council
of
Massachussetts
state,
We,
Bartolomo
(sic)
Vanzetti,
an′
Nicola
Sacco,
do
say:
Confined
to
our
jail
here
at
Dedham
an'
under
the
sentence
of
death,
We
pray
you
do
exercise
your
powers
an'
look
at
the
facts
of
our
case.
We
do
not
ask
you
for
a
pardon,
for
a
pardon
would
admit
of
our
guilt;
Since
we
are
both
innocent
workers,
we
have
no
guilt
to
admit.
We
are
both
born
by
parents
in
Italy,
can′t
speak
English
too
well;
Our
friends
of
labor
are
writin′
these
words,
back
of
the
barsin
our
cell.
Our
friends
say
if
we
speak
too
plain,
sir,
we
may
turn
your
feelings
away,
Widen
these
canyons
between
us,
but
we
risk
our
life
to
talk
plain.
We
think,
sir,
that
each
human
bein'
is
in
close
touch
with
all
of
man′s
kind,
We
think,
sir,
that
each
human
bein'
knows
right
from
the
wrong
in
his
mind.
We
talk
to
you
here
as
a
man,
sir,
even
knowing
our
opinions
divide;
We
didn′t
kill
the
guards
at
South
Braintree,
nor
dream
of
such
a
terrible
crime.
We
call
your
eye
to
this
fact,
sir,
we
work
with
our
hand
and
our
brain;
These
robberies
an'
killings,
were
done,
sir,
by
professional
bandit
men,
Sacco
has
been
a
good
cutter,
Mrs.
Sacco
their
money
has
saved;
I,
Vanzetti,
l
could
have
saved
money,
but
I
gave
it
as
fast
as
received.
L′m
a
dreamer,
a
speaker,
an'
a
writer;
I
fight
on
the
working
folks'
side.
Sacco
is
Boston′s
fastest
shoe
trimmer,
and
he
talks
to
the
husbands
and
wives.
We
hunted
your
land,
and
we
found
it,
hoped
we′d
find
freedom
of
mind,
Built
up
your
land,
this
Land
of
the
Free,
an'
this
is
what
we
come
to
find.
If
we
was
those
killers,
good
Governor,
we′d
not
be
so
dumb
and
so
blind
To
pass
out
our
handbills
and
make
workers'
speeches,
out
here
by
the
scene
of
the
crime.
Those
fifteen
thousands
of
dollars
the
lawyers
and
judge
said
we
took,
Do
we,
sir,
dress
up
like
two
gentlemen
with
that
much
in
our
pocketbook?
Our
names
are
on
the
long
list
of
radicals
of
the
Federal
Government,
sir,
They
said
that
we
needed
watching
as
we
peddled
our
literature.
Judge
Thayer′s
mind's
made
up,
sir,
when
we
walked
into
the
court;
Well,
he
called
us
anarchistic
bastards,
said
lots
of
other
things
worse.
They
brought
people
down
there
to
Brockton
to
look
through
the
bars
of
our
cell,
Made
us
act
out
the
motions
of
the
killers,
and
still
not
so
many
could
tell.
Before
the
trial
ever
started,
the
jury
foreman
did
say,
An′
he
cussed
us
an'
said,
"Damn
they,
well,
they'd
ought
to
hang
anyway."
Our
fatal
mistake
was
carryin′
our
guns,
about
which
we
had
to
tell
lies
To
keep
the
police
from
raiding
the
homes
of
workers
believing
like
us.
A
labor
paper,
or
a
picture,
a
letter
from
a
radical
friend,
An
old
cheap
gun
like
you
keep
around
home,
would
torture
good
women
and
men.
We
all
feared
deporting
and
whipping,
torments
to
make
us
confess
The
place
where
the
workers
are
meeting,
the
house,
your
name,
and
address.
Well.
the
officers
said
we
feared
something
which
they
called
a
consciousness
of
guilt.
We
was
afraid
of
wreckin′
more
homes,
and
seein'
more
workers′
blood
spilt.
Well,
the
very
first
question
they
asked
us
was
not
about
killing
the
clerks,
But
things
about
our
labor
movement,
and
how
our
trade
union
works.
Oh,
how
could
our
jury
see
clearly,
when
the
lawyers,
and
judges,
and
cops
Called
us
low
type
Italians,
said
we
looked
just
like
regular
wops,
Draft
dodgers,
gun
packers,
anarchists,
these
vulgar
sounding
names,
Blew
dust
in
the
eyes
of
jurors,
the
crowd
in
the
courtroom
the
same.
We
do
not
believe,
sir,
that
torture,
beatings,
and
killings
and
pains
Will
lift
man's
eyes
to
a
highest
of
view
an′
break
his
bilbos
and
chains.
We
believe
that
you
must
struggle
for
freedom
before
your
freedom
you'll
gain,
Freedom
from
fear,
sir,
and
greed,
sir,
and
your
freedom
to
think
higher
things.
This
fight,
sir,
is
not
a
new
battle,
we
did
not
make
it
last
night,
′Twas
fought
by
Godwin,
Shelly,
Pisacane,
Tolstoy
and
Christ;
It's
bigger
than
the
atoms
an'
the
sands
of
the
desert,
planets
that
roll
in
the
sky;
Till
workers
get
rid
of
their
robbers,
well,
it′s
worse,
sir,
to
live
than
to
die.
Your
Excellency,
we′re
not
askin'
pardon
but
askin′
to
be
set
free,
With
liberty,
and
pride,
sir,
and
honor,
and
a
pardon
we
will
not
receive.
A
pardon
you
given
to
criminals
who've
broken
the
laws
of
the
land;
We
don′t
ask
you
for
pardon,
sir,
because
we
are
innocent
men.
Well,
if
you
shake
your
head
"no",
dear
Governor,
of
course,
our
doom
it
is
sealed.
We
hold
up
our
heads
like
two
sons
of
men,
seven
years
in
these
cells
of
steel.
We
walk
down
this
corridor
to
death,
sir,
like
workers
have
walked
it
before,
But
we'll
work
in
our
working
class
struggle
if
we
live
a
thousand
lives
more.
1 Sacco's Letter to His Son
2 The Flood and the Storm
3 Two Good Men (Sacco and Vanzetti)
4 I Just Want to Sing Your Name
5 Red Wine
6 Suassos Lane
7 You Souls of Boston
8 Old Judge Thayer
9 Vanzetti's Rock
10 Vanzetti's Letter
11 Root Hog and Die
12 We Welcome to Heaven
13 Sacco's Letter to His Son
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