My body? Ah, if I could choose, I would to ashes it reduce, And let the merry breezes blow My dust to where some fading flowers grow.Perhaps some fading flowers then Would come to life and bloom again. This is my last and final will. Good luck to you.Joe Hill
Joe Hill come over from Sweden shores/ Looking for some work to do/ And the Statue of Liberty waved him by/ As Joe come a sailing through, Joe Hill/ As Joe come a sailing through./Oh his clothes were coarse and his hopes were high/ As he headed for the promised land/ And it took a few weeks on the out-of-work streets/ Before he began to understand/ Before he began to understand/And Joe got hired by a bowery bar/ sweeping up the saloon/ As his rag would sail over the baroom rail/ Sounded like he whistled on a tune/ You could almost hear him whistling on a tune/And Joe rolled on from job to job/ From the docks to the railroad line/ And no matter how hungry the hand that wrote/ In his letters he was always doing fine/ In his letters he was always doing fine/Oh, the years went by like the sun goin' down/ slowly turn the page/ And when Joe looked back at the sweat upon his tracks/ He had nothing to show but his age/ He had nothing to show but his age/So he headed out for the California shore/ There things were just as bad/ So he joined the Industrial Workers of the World/ 'Cause, The union was the only friend he had/ 'Cause, The union was the only friend he had/Now the strikes were bloody and the strikes were black/ as hard as they were long/ In the dark of night Joe would stay awake and write/ In the morning he would raise them with a song/ In the morning he would raise them with a song/And he wrote his words to the tunes of the day/ To be passed along the union vine/ And the strikes were led and the songs were spread/ And Joe Hill was always on the line/ Yes Joe Hill was always on the line/Now in Salt Lake City a murder was made/ There was hardly a clue to find/ Oh, the proof was poor, but the sheriff was sure/ Joe was the killer of the crime/ That Joe was the killer of the crime/Joe raised his hands but they shot him down/ he had nothing but guilt to give/ It's a doctor I need and they left him to bleed/ He made it 'cause he had the will to live/ Yes, He made it 'cause he had the will to live/Then the trial was held in a building of wood/ And there the killer would be named/ And the days weighed more than the cold copper ore/ Cause he feared that he was being framed/ Cause he found out that he was being framed/Oh, strange are the ways of western law/ Strange are the ways of fate/ For the government crawled to the mine owner's call/ That the judge was appointed by the state/ Yes, The judge was appointed by the state/Oh, Utah justice can be had/ But not for a union man/ And Joe was warned by summer early morn/ That there'd be one less singer in the land/ There'd be one less singer in the land/Now William Spry was Governor Spry/ And a life was his to hold/ On the last appeal, fell a governor's tear/ May the lord have mercy on your soul/ May the lord have mercy on your soul/Even President Wilson held up the day/ But even he would fail/ For nobody heard the soul searching words/ Of the soul in the Salt Lake City jail/ Of the soul in the Salt Lake City jail/For 36 years he lived out his days/ And he more than played his part/ For his songs that he made, he was carefully paid/ With a rifle bullet buried in his heart/ With a rifle bullet buried in his heart/Yes, they lined Joe Hill up against the wall/ Blindfold over his eyes/ It's the life of a rebel that he chose to live/ It's the death of a rebel that he died/ It's the death of a rebel that he died/Now some say Joe was guilty as charged/ And some say he wasn't even there/ And I guess nobody will ever know/ 'Cause the court records all disappeared/ 'Cause the court records all disappeared/Say wherever you go in this fair land/ In every union hall/ In the dusty dark these words are marked/ In between all the cracks upon the wall/ In between all the cracks upon the wall/It's the very last line that Joe Will wrote/ When he knew that his days were through/ "Boys, this is my last and final will/ Good luck to all of you/ Good luck to all of you"/Notes:Joe Hill was an IWW (a.k.a. wobblies) member who wrote "topical" songs, much as the above lyrics say. He was executed in Utah in 1915.This song uses the same tune as Woody Guthrie's Tom Joad, which, in turn, came from an older song called John Hardy.