Baez Joan Blessed Are... The Night They Drove Old Dixi Down Virgil Caine is the name and I served on the Danville train, Till Stonemanīs Cavalry came anī tore up the tracks again In the winter of sixty-five, we were hungry, just barely alive. By May the tenth Richmond had fell; Its a time I remember, oh, so well. (CHORUS) The night they drove old Dixi down And the bells were ringinī; The night they drove old Dixi down And all the people were singinī, they went: La la, la, la, la, la, la, La, la, la, la, la, la, la La, la, la. Back with my wife in Tennessee when one day she called to me, "Virgil, quick! Come see! There goes Robert E. Lee!" Now I donīt mind choppinī wood and I donīt care if the moneyīs no good, Ya take what ya need and ya leave the rest but they should never have taken the very best. Like my father before me I will work the land Just like my brother above me, who took a Rebel stand; He was just eighteen, my proud and brave, but a Yankee laid him in his grave. I swear by the mud below my feet You canīt raise a Caine back up when heīs in defeat. J. Robbie Robertson Copyright 1969 by Canaan Music, Inc. ASCAP 3.22 "The difference between the words on the record and the words in the text are either itentional or otherwise." Joan Baez |
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