paroles de chanson The Spirit of Mother Jones - Andy Irvine
Mother
Jones
is
dead
and
gone
she
could
no
longer
stay
No
one
knew
how
old
she
was
but
she
was
often
heard
to
say
How
she
was
born
in
1830
in
the
sweet
County
Cork
But
she
crossed
the
foaming
billows
till
she
landed
in
New
York
Mother
Jones
the
miners'
angel
must
be
treated
with
respect
She's
an
old-fashioned
lady
and
you
never
would
suspect
That
this
gown
and
this
bonnet
would
fill
the
rich
man
full
of
dread
"She's
the
most
dangerous
woman
in
America!",
they
said
I
see
her
marching
down
the
street
with
her
umbrella
in
her
hand
I
can
hear
her
still
at
Ludlow
where
the
miners
made
a
stand
And
she
says:
"John
D.
will
you
kindly
tell
to
me
How
could
you
let
your
troopers
lay
them
thirteen
children
down?"
In
the
horrors
of
West
Virginia
and
in
Colorado
too
Mother
Jones
and
her
miners
they
never
could
subdue
And
the
men
they
fought
and
died
in
their
tents
and
shanty
towns
And
the
women
stood
like
a
wall
of
steel
that
nothing
could
batter
down
Mother
Jones
the
miners'
angel
must
be
treated
with
respect
She's
an
old-fashioned
lady
and
you
never
would
suspect
That
this
gown
and
this
bonnet
would
fill
the
rich
man
full
of
dread
"She's
the
most
dangerous
woman
in
America!",
they
said
"And
it's
now
for
the
evils
of
child
labour",
says
she
And
the
march
of
the
mill
children
took
place
in
nineteen
three
From
Philadelphia
to
New
York
and
she
says:
"I'm
going
to
show
Wall
Street
the
flesh
and
blood
they
squeeze
to
make
their
dough"
When
she
died
in
1930
O
the
sadness
was
profound
And
they
laid
her
to
rest
in
a
Union
burial
ground
And
she
lies
in
Mount
Olive
where
the
midnight
wind
it
moans
"Stand
up
for
the
Union!",
cries
the
spirit
of
Mother
Jones
The
rich
man
and
his
police
and
his
pulpit
and
his
press
Got
away
with
murder
then
they'd
get
away
with
it
yet
But
we'll
form
a
mighty
union
and
we
won't
be
overthrown
And
we
never
will
forget
the
spirit
of
Mother
Jones
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