Текст песни Ballad for Americans - Paul Robeson
In
seventy-six
the
sky
was
red
Thunder
rumbling
overhead
Bad
King
George
couldn't
sleep
in
his
bed
And
on
that
stormy
morn,
Ol'
Uncle
Sam
was
born.
Some
birthday!
Ol'
Sam
put
on
a
three
cornered
hat
And
in
a
Richmond
church
he
sat
And
Patrick
Henry
told
him
that
while
America
drew
breath
It
was
"Liberty
or
death."
What
kind
of
hat
is
a
three-cornered
hat?
Did
they
all
believe
in
liberty
in
those
days?
Nobody
who
was
anybody
believed
it.
Ev'rybody
who
was
anybody
they
doubted
it.
Nobody
had
faith.
Nobody
but
Washington,
Tom
Paine,
Benjamin
Franklin,
Chaim
Solomon,
Crispus
Attucks,
Lafayette.
Nobodies.
The
nobodies
ran
a
trea
party
at
Boston.
Betsy
Ross
Organized
a
sewing
circle.
Paul
Revere
had
a
horse
race.
And
a
little
ragged
group
believed
it.
And
some
gentlemen
and
ladies
believed
it.
And
some
wise
men
and
some
fools,
and
I
believed
it
too.
And
you
know
who
I
am.
No.
Who
are
you
mister?
Yeah,
how
come
all
this?
Well,
I'll
tell
you.
It's
like
this...
No
let
us
tell
you.
Mister
Tom
Jefferson,
a
mighty
fine
man.
He
wrote
it
down
in
a
mighty
fine
plan.
And
the
rest
all
signed
it
with
a
mighty
fine
hand
As
they
crossed
thier
T's
and
dotted
their
I's
A
bran'
new
country
did
arise.
And
a
mighty
fine
idea.
"Adopted
unanimously
in
Congress
July
4,
1776,
We
hold
these
truths
to
be
self-evident,
that
all
men
are
created
equal.
That
they
are
endowed
by
their
creator
with
certain
inalienable
rights.
That
among
these
rights
are
Life,
Yes
sir!,
Liberty,
That's
right!
And
the
pursuit
of
happiness."
Is
that
what
they
said?
The
very
words.
That
does
sound
mighty
fine.
Buildiing
a
nation
is
awful
tough.
The
people
found
the
going
rough.
(Some
lived
in
cities,
some
worked
the
land,
And
united
they
did
stand,
to
make
our
country
grand.)
Still
nobody
who
was
anybody
believed
it.
Everybody
who
anybody
they
stayed
at
home.
But
Lewis
and
Clarke
and
the
pioneers,
Driven
by
hunger,
haunted
by
fears,
The
Klondike
miners
and
the
forty
niners,
Some
wanted
freedom
and
some
wanted
riches,
Some
liked
to
loaf
while
others
dug
ditches.
But
they
believed
it.
And
I
believed
it
too,
And
you
know
who
I
am.
No,
who
are
you
anyway,
Mister?
Well,
you
see
it's
like
this.
I
started
to
tell
you.
I
represent
the
whole...
Why
that's
it!
Let
my
people
go.
That's
the
idea!
Old
Abe
Lincoln
was
thin
and
long,
His
heart
was
high
and
his
faith
was
strong.
But
he
hated
oppression,
he
hated
wrong,
And
he
went
down
to
his
grave
to
free
the
slave.
A
man
in
white
skin
can
never
be
free
while
his
black
brother
is
in
Slavery,
"And
we
here
highly
resolve
that
these
dead
shall
not
haave
died
in
vain.
And
this
government
of
the
people,
by
the
people
and
for
the
people
Shall
not
perish
from
the
Earth."
Abraham
Lincoln
said
that
on
November
19,
1863
at
Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania.
And
he
was
right.
I
believe
that
too.
Say,
we
still
don't
know
who
you
are,
mister.
Well,
I
started
to
tell
you...
The
machine
age
came
with
a
great
big
roar,
As
America
grew
in
peace
and
war.
And
a
million
wheels
went
around
and
'round.
The
cities
reached
into
the
sky,
And
dug
down
deep
into
the
ground.
And
some
got
rich
and
some
got
poor.
But
the
people
carried
through,
So
our
country
grew.
(With
Susan
B.
Anthony
and
the
Suffragettes,
We
women
fought
with
all
our
might
And
we
made
voting
our
right.
Our
struggle
continues
to
this
day.
And
the
people
carried
through,
So
our
country
grew.)
Still
nobody
who
was
anybody
believed
it.
Everybody
who
was
anybody
they
doubted
it.
And
they
are
doubting
still,
And
I
guess
they
always
will,
But
who
cares
what
they
say
whem
I
am
on
my
way
Say,
will
you
please
tell
us
who
you
are?
What's
your
name,
Buddy?
Where
you
goin'?
Who
are
you?
Well,
I'm
the
everybody
who's
nobody,
I'm
the
nobody
who's
everybody.
What's
your
racket?
What
do
you
do
for
a
living?
Well,
I'm
an
Engineer,
musician,
street
cleaner,
carpenter,
teacher,
How
about
a
farmer?
Also.
Office
clerk?
Yes
sir!
That's
right.
(Homemaker?)
Certainly!
Factory
worker?
You
said
it.
(Mail
carrier?)
Yes
ma'am.
(Hospital
worker?)
Absotively!
(Social
worker?)
Posolutely!
Truck
driver?
Definitely!
Miner,
seamstress,
ditchdigger,
all
of
them.
I
am
the
"etceteras"
and
the
"and
so
forths"
that
do
the
work.
Now
hold
on
here,
what
are
you
trying
to
give
us?
Are
you
an
American?
Am
I
an
American?
I'm
just
an
Irish,
(African),
Jewish,
Italian,
French
and
English,
Spanish,
Russian,
Chinese,
Polish,
Scotch,
Hungarian,
(Jamaican),
Swedish,
Finnish,
(Dominican),
Greek
and
Turk
and
Czech
And
(Native
American).
And
that
ain't
all.
I
was
baptized
Baptist,
Methodist,
Congregationalist,
Luthern,
Atheist,
Roman
Catholic,
(Moslem)
Jewish,
Presbyterian,
Seventh
Day
Adventist,
Mormon,
Quaker,
Christian
Scientist
and
lots
more.
You
sure
are
something.
Our
country's
strong,
our
country's
young,
And
her
greatest
songs
are
still
unsung.
>From
her
plains
and
mountains
we
have
sprung,
To
keep
the
faith
with
those
who
went
before.
We
nobodies
who
are
anybody
belive
it.
We
anybodies
who
are
everybody
have
no
doubts.
Out
of
the
cheating,
out
of
the
shouting,
(Out
of
the
greed
and
polluting,
Out
of
the
massacre
at
Wounded
Knee,
Out
of
the
lies
of
McCarthy,
Out
of
the
murders
of
Martin
and
John,
It
will
come
again,
Our
song
of
hope
is
here
again.)
(Precious
as
our
planet),
Deep
as
our
valleys,
High
as
our
mountains,
Strong
as
the
people
who
made
it.
For
I
have
always
believed
it,
and
I
believe
it
now,
And
now
you
know
who
I
am.
Who
are
you?
America!
America!
1 Ballad for Americans
2 Summertime
3 Ol' Man River
4 Shortenin' Bread
5 Now Steps the Crimson Petal
6 The Four Rivers
7 My Old Kentucky Home
8 Fat Li'l Feller With His Mammy's Eyes
9 My Way
10 River Stay Away from My Door
11 Lazy Bones
12 Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
13 Nobody Knows the Trouble I Seen
14 Mighty Lak' a Rose
15 Oh No John
16 Lonesome Road
17 The Black Emperor
18 Round the Bend of the Road
19 Don't You Cry My Honey
20 Take Me Away from the River
21 Get on Board Little Children
22 It Ain't Necessarily So
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