paroles de chanson Ballad of the Harp Weaver - Johnny Cash
Umm,
we
would
like
to
say
that
On
May
10th,
this
year
We′re
goin'
into
Carnegie
Hall
Where
is
Carnegie
Hall
Luthe?
(Mississippi)
Mississippi
(no,
it′s
not)
Uh,
Gordon
Terry,
John
Western
The
Carter
Family,
Tom,
Paul,
McGlaiser
Brothers
And
Mike
Wiseman
for,
uh,
showin'
We're
gonna
record
on
the
stage
at
Carnegie
Hall
An
album
And
uh,
one
of
the
things
we
intend
to
record
is
a
reading
It′s
one
of
our
very
favorite
poems
I
think
a
beautiful
story
We′d
like
to
do
it
for
you
We
hope
you
enjoy
"The
Ballad
of
the
Harp
Weaver"
Once,
my
mother
told
me
when
I
was
knee
high
"Son,
you'll
need
clothes
this
winter,
and
not
a
rag
have
I
There′s
not
a
thing
in
this
house
to
make
a
boy's
britches
I
don′t
even
have
scissors
for
the
cloth
nor
thread
for
the
stitches
There's
nothing
in
this
house
but
a
half
a
loaf
of
rye
And
that
old
family
harp
of
ours
that
no
one
will
buy"
Well,
that
was
in
the
late
fall
and
when
the
winter
came
I
didn′t
have
a
pair
of
britches
nor
a
shirt
to
my
name
But
my
mother
said,
"Son,
come
climb
on
my
lap
And
I'll
warm
those
skinny
legs
while
you
take
a
nap"
And
we'd
rock
back
and
forth
to
a
Mother
Goose
rhyme
And
boy,
we
were
happy
for
about
an
hours
time
I
heard
it
said
that
that
year
the
winter
was
very
bad
I
know
we
sat
on
the
floor
because
we
burned
what
chairs
we
had
Except
for
one
chair
that
mother
couldn′t
break
And
that
old
family
harp
of
ours
that
no
one
would
take
One
night,
I
was
sick
with
a
cold
and
my
mother
sang
me
to
sleep
And
when
she
laid
me
on
the
floor,
I
thought
I
heard
her
weep
But
then
I
saw
her
sittin′
in
that
one
good
chair
With
the
light
shining
on
her
from
I
couldn't
tell
where
But
she
looked
eighteen
years
old,
not
a
day
older
And
there
was
that
old
harp
playing
against
her
shoulder
Well,
she
began
to
play
that
harp
and
her
hands
moved
rapidly
Then
thread
ran
to
the
harp
strings
from
somewhere
that
I
couldn′t
see
Then
all
colored
threads
began
to
glide
right
through
my
mother's
hands
I
saw
the
thread
turn
into
cloth
And
I
watched
the
cloth
expand
And
she
wove
a
boy′s
jacket
and
when
it
was
done
She
laid
it
on
the
floor
and
wove
another
one
She
wove
a
long
red
coat,
and
what
a
sight
to
see
"That
coat's
for
a
king′s
son",
I
said
"Couldn't
be
for
me,"
but
I
knew
it
was
for
me
She
wove
a
pair
of
britches
and
quicker
than
that
She
wove
a
pair
of
boots
and
a
little
woolen
hat
She
wove
a
pair
of
mittens,
she
wove
a
little
blouse
She
wove
all
night
in
that
cold
barren
house
Then
she
sang
while
she
worked
and
the
harp
strings
spoke
But
her
voice
never
faltered
and
the
thread
never
broke
But
when
I
awoke,
there
sat
my
mother
With
that
harp
against
her
shoulder
lookin'
eighteen
years
old,
not
a
day
older
A
smile
on
her
lips
and
a
light
around
her
head
But
her
hands
were
on
the
harp
strings,
frozen
dead
But
on
the
floor
beside
her,
piled
six
feet
high
Were
clothes
good
enough
for
a
king
just
my
size
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