Preamble of the Industrial Workers of the World The working class and the employing class have nothing in common. There . can he no peace so long as hunger and want are found among millions, of the working people and the few who make up the employing class, have all the good things of life. Between these two classes a struggle must go on until the workers of the world organize as a class, take possession of the earth and the machinery of _ production, and abolish the wage system. We find that the centering of the management of industries into fewer and fewer hands makes the trade unions unable to cope with the ever growing power of the employing class. The trade unions foster a state of affairs which allows one set of workers to be pitted against another set of workers in the same industry, thereby helping to' defeat one another in wage wars. Moreover, the trade unions aid the employing class to mislead the workers into the belief that the working class have interests in common with their employers. These conditions can be changed and the interest of the working class upheld only by an organization-formed in such a way that all its members in any one industry, or in all industries if necessary, cease work whenever a strike or lockout is on in any department thereof, thus making an injury to one an injury to all. Instead of the conservative motto, "A fair day’s wage for a fair day’s work,” we must inscribe on our banner the revolutionary watchword, "Abolition of the wage system.” It is the historic mission of the working class to do away with capitalism. The army of production must be organized, not only for the everyday struggle with capitalists, but also to carry an production when capitalism shall have been overthrown. By organizing industrially we are forming the structure of the new society within the shell of the old.I. W. W. SONGS SONGS OF LIFE—and “Take out the words, if so must be, But leave, oh, leave the melody.” NINETEENTH EDITION PRICE TEN CENTS PUBLISHED BY THE INDUSTRIAL WORKERS OF THE WORLD 1001 W. MADISON ST. CHICAGO, ILL., U. S. A. /JOE HILLINDEX Page All Hell Can’t Stop Us ..........................18 A Worker’s Plea ................................ 58 Big Question, The ............................... 24 Count Your Workers............................... 49 Commonwealth of Toil ............................ 57 Dump the Bosses Off Your Back ................... 18 Dollai' Alarm Clock ............................. 26 Don’t Take My Papa Away From Me ................. 40 Everett County Jail ............................. 43 Fifty Thousand Lumber Jacks ..................... 50 Farewell Frank................................... 56 Harvest Land .................................... 61 Hold The Fort ................................... 63 Harvest War Song ................................ 12 International, The ............................... 6 Industrial Workers of the World ................. 31 I’m Too Old To Be A Scab......................... 29 Industrial Unionism Speaks to Toilers of the Sea .. 35 I Wanna Free Miss Liberty........................ 44 John Golden and The Lawrence Strike ............. 15 Joe Hills Last Will.............................. 53 Mr. Block....................................... 30 My Wandering Boy................................. 42 May Day Song..................................... 46 Mysteries of a Hobo’s Life....................... 54 One Big Industrial Union......................., 10 Onward One Big Union ............................ 48 Organize......................................... 59 Preacher and The Slave, The...................... 36 Popular Wobbly .................................. 37 Rebel Girl, The................................... 5 Red Flag, The.................................... 10 Remember ........................................ 34 Renunciation .................................... 39 Scissor Bill .................... . . 16 Solidarity Forever............................. 25 Tramp, The....................................... 20Page They’ll Soon Ring Out........................... 47 There Is Power in a Union....................... 60 Tie ’Em Up ..................................... 52 Up From Your Knees.............................. 19 We Will Sing One Song .......................... 7 Workers of the World Awaken .................... 8 Workers of the World Are Now Awaking ........... 11 Workers of the World............................ 14 Whadda Ya Want to Break Your Back For the Boss For? ....................................... 22 White Slave, The................................ 23 We Have Fed You All For A Thousand Years........ 28 Worker’s Marseillaise, The ..................... 33 When You Wear That Button....................... 41 Workers’ Memorial Song........................ 55 Working Men Unite............................... 64THE REBEL GIRL Words and Music by Joe Hill (Copyrighted, 1916) There are women of many descriptions In this queer world, as everyone knows, Some are living in beautiful mansions, And are wearing the finest of clothes. There are blue blooded queens and princesses, Who have charms made of diamonds and pearl; But the only and thoroughbred lady Is the Rebel Girl. CHORUS That’s the Rebel Girl, that’s the Rebel Girl! To the working class she’s a precious pearl. She brings courage, pride and joy To the fighting Rebel Boy. We’ve had girls before, but we need some more In the Industrial Workers of the World. For it’s great to fight for freedom With a Rebel Girl. Yes, her hands may be hardened from labor, And her dress may not be very fine; But a heart in her bosom is beating That is true to her class and her kind. And the grafters in terror are trembling When her spite and defiance she’ll hurl; For the only and thoroughbred lady Is the Rebel Girl. Words and Music of “The Rebel Girl” may be obtained in popular sheet form by applying to I. W. W. Publishing Bureau. Price 25 cents. 5THE INTERNATIONALE By Eugene Pottier (Translated by Charles H. Kerr) Arise, ye prisoners of starvation! Arise, ye wretched of the earth, For justice thunders condemnation, A better world’s in birth. No more tradition’s chains shall bind us Arise, ye slaves; no more in thrall! The earth shall rise on new foundations, We have been naught, we shall be all. REFRAIN ’Tis the final conflict, Let each stand in his place, The Industrial Union Shall be the human race. We want no condescending saviors To rule us from a judgment hall; We workers ask not for their favors; Let us consult for all. To make the thief disgorge his booty To free the spirit from its cell, We must ourselves decide our duty, We must decide and do it well. Behold them seated in' their glory, The kings of mine and rail and soil! What have you read in all their story, But how they plundered toil? Fruits of the workers’ toil are buried In the strong coffers of a few; In working for their restitution The men will only ask their due. 6WE WILL SING ONE SONG By Joe Hill (Air: “My Old Kentucky Home”) We will sing• one song of the meek and humble slave, The horny-handed son of toil, He’s toiling hard from the cradle to the grave, But his master reaps the profit from his toil. Then we’ll sing one song of the greedy master class, They’re vagrants in broadcloth, indeed, They live by robbing the ever-toiling mass, Human blood they spill to satisfy their greed. Chorus Organize! Oh, toilers, come organize your might; Then we’ll sing one song of the workers’ commonwealth. Full of beauty, full of love and health. We will sing one song of the politician sly, He’s talking of changing the laws; Election day all the drinks and smokes he’ll buy, While we make the welkin ring with our applause. Then we’ll sing one song of the girl below the line, She’s scorned and despised everywhere, While in their mansions the “keepers” wine and dine From the profits that immoral traffic bear. We will sing one song of the preacher, fat and sleek, He tells you of homes in the sky. He says, “Be generous, be lowly and meek, If you don’t you’ll sure get roasted when you die.” Then we’ll sing one song of the poor and ragged tramp, He carries his home on his back; Too old to work, he’s not wanted ’round the camp, So he wanders without aim along the track. 7We will sing־ one song of the children in the mills, They’re taken from playgrounds and schools, In tender years made to go the pace that kills, In the sweatshops, ’mong the looms and the spools. Then we’ll sing one song of the One Big Union Grand, The hope of the toiler and slave, It’s coming fast! it is sweeping sea and land, To the terror of the grafter and the knave. WORKERS OF THE WORLD, AWAKEN! By Joe Hill Workers of the world, awaken! Break your chains, demand your rights. All the wealth you make is taken By exploiting parasites. Shall you kneel in deep submission From your cradles to your graves? Is the height of your ambition To be good and willing slaves? Chorus Arise, ye prisoners of starvation! Fight for your own emancipation; Arise, ye slaves of every nation. In One Union grand. Our little ones for bread are crying, And millions are from hunger dying; The end the means is justifying, ’Tis the final stand. 8If the workers take a notion, They can stop all speeding• trains; Every ship upon the ocean They can tie with mighty chains Every wheel in the creation, Every mine and every mill, Fleets and armies of the nation, Will at their command stand still. Join the union, fellow workers, Men and women, side by side; We ,will crush the greedy shirkers Like a sweeping, surging tide; For united we are standing, But divided we will fall; Let this be our understanding— “All for one and one for all.” Workers of the world, awaken! Rise in all your splendid might; Take the wealth that you are making, It belongs to you by right. No one will for bread be crying, We’ll have freedom, love and health. When the grand red flag is flying In the Workers’ Commonwealth. A shorter workday for all employed workers would put thousands of unemployed to work. If everybody worked there would be no poverty. 9ONE BIG INDUSTRIAL UNION By G. G. Allen (Air: “Marching Through Georgia”) Bring the good old red book, boys, we’ll sing another song. Sing it to the wage slave who has not yet joined the throng; Of the revolution that will sweep the world along, To One Big Industrial Union. CHORUS Hooray! Hooray The truth will make you free. Hooray! Hooray! When will you workers see? The only way you’ll gain your economic liberty, Is One Big Industrial Union. You migratory workers of the common labor clan, We sing to you to j'oin and be a fighting Union Man; You must emancipate yourself, you proletarian, With One Big Industrial Union. THE RED FLAG By James Connell The workers’ flag is deepest red, It shrouded oft our martyred dead; And ere their limbs grew stiff and cold Their life-blood dyed its every fold. CHORUS Then raise the scarlet standard high; Beneath its folds we’ll live and die, Though cowards flinch and traitors sneer, We’ll keep the red flag flying here. 10Look ’round, the Frenchman loves its blaze The sturdy German chants its praise; In Moscow’s vaults its hymns are sung, Chicago swells its surging song. It waved above our infant might When all ahead seemed dark as night; It witnessed many a deed and vow, We will not change its color now. It suits today the meek and base, Whose minds are fixed on pelf and place; To cringe beneath the rich man’s frown, And haul that sacred emblem down. With heads uncovered swear we all, To bear it onward till we fall; Come dungeons dark or gallows grim, This song shall be our parting hymn. THE WORKERS OF THE WORLLD ARE NOW AWAKING By Richard Brazier (Tune: “The Shade of the Old Apple Tree”) The Workers of the World are now awaking; The earth is shaking with their mighty tread. The master class in great fear now are quaking, The sword of Darpocles hangs o’er their head. The toilers in one union are uniting, To overthrow their cruel master’s reign. In One Big Union now they all are fighting, The product of their labor to retain. 11CHORUS It’s a union for true Liberty It’s a union for you and for me; It’s the workers’ own choice, It’s for girls and for boys, Who want freedom from wage slavery; And wre march with a Red Flag ahead, ’Cause the blood of all nations is red— Come on and join in the fray, Come on and join us today, We are fighting for Freedom and Bread. The master’s class in fear have kept us shaking-, For long in bondage they held us fast; But the fight the Industrial Workers are now making Will make our chains a relic of the past. Industrial unionism now is calling, The toilers of the world they hear its cry; In line with the Industrial Workers they are falling, By their principles to stand or fall and die. HARVEST WAR SONG By Pat Brennan (Tune: “Tipperary”) We are coming home, John Farmer; we are coming back to stay. For nigh on fifty years or more, we’ve gathered up your hay. We have slept out in your hayfields, we have heard your morning shout; We’ve heard you wondering where in hell’s them pesky go-abouts ? , 12CHORUS It’s a long way, now understand me; it’s a long way to town; It’s a long way across the prairie, and to hell with Farmer John. Here goes for better wages, and the hours must come down; For we’re out for a winter’s stake this summer, and we want no scabs around. You’ve paid the going wages, that’s what kept us on the bum. You say you’ve done your duty, you chin-whiskered son of a gun. We have sent your kids to college, but still you rave and shout. And call us tramps and hoboes, and pesky go-abouts. But now the long wintry breezes are a-shaking our poor frames, And the long• drawn days of hunger try to drive us boes insane. It is driving us to action—we are organized today; Us pesky tramps and hoboes are coming back to stay. YOU cannot be free while your CLASS is enslave! Join the I. W. W. and find YOUR place in the final battle for the emancipation of the world’s workers. 13WORKERS OF THE WORLD (Air: “Lillibulero”) By Connell , Stand up, ye toilers, why crouch ye like cravens? Why clutch an existence of insult and want? Why stand to be plucked by an army of ravens, Or hoodwink’d forever by twaddle and cant? Think of the wrongs ye bear, Think on the rags ye wear, Think on the insults endur’d from your birth; Toiling in snow and rain, Rearing up heaps of grain, All for the tyrants who grind you to earth. Your brains are as keen as the brains of your masters, In swiftness and strength ye surpass them by far; Ye’ve brave hearts to teach you to laugh at disasters, Ye vastly outnumber your tyrants in war. Why then like cowards stand, Using not brain or hand, Thankful like dogs when they throw you a bone? What right have they to take Things that ye toil to make? Know ye not, workers, that all is your own? Rise in your might, brothers, bear it no longer; Assemble in masses throughout the whole land; Show these incapables who are the stronger When workers and idlers confronted shall stand. Thro’ Castle, Court and Hall, Over their acres all, Onwards we’ll press like waves of the sea, Claiming the wealth we’ve made, Ending the spoiler’s trade; Labor shall triumph and mankind be free. 14JOHN GOLDEN AND THE LAWRENCE STRIKE By Joe Hill (Tune: “A Little Talk with Jesus”) In Lawrence, when the starving masses struck for more to eat And wooden-headed Wood he tried the strikers to defeat, To Sammy Gompers wrote and asked him what he thought, And this is just the answer that the mailman brought: CHORUS A little talk with Golden Makes it right, all right; He”ll settle any strike, If there’s coin in sight; Just take him up to dine And everything is fine- A little talk with Golden Makes it right, all right. The preachers, cops and money-kings were working hanu in hand, The boys in blue, with stars and stripes were sent by Uncle Sam; Still things were looking blue, ’cause every striker knew That weaving cloth with bayonets is hard to do. John Golden had with Mr. Wood a private interview, He told him how to bust up the “I double double U.” He came out in a while and wore the Golden smile. He said: “I’ve got all labor leaders skinned a mile.” 15John Golden pulled a bogus strike with all his “pinks and stools.” . He thought the rest would follow like a bunch of crazy fools. • But to his great surprise the “foreigners” were wise, In one big solid union they were organized. CHORUS OF THE LAST VERSE That’s one time Golden did not Make it right, all right; In spite of his schemes » The strikers won the fight. When all the workers stand United hand in hand, The world with all its wealth Will be at their command. SCISSOR BILL By Joe Hill (Tune: “Steamboat Bill”) You may ramble ’round the country anywhere you will, You”ll always run across the same old Scissor Bill. He’s found upon the desert, he is on the hill, He’s found in every mining camp and lumber mill. He looks just like a human, he can eat and walk, But you will find he isn’t when he starts to talk. He’ll say, “This is my country,” with an honest face, While all the cops they chase him out of every place. CHORUS Scissor Bill, he is a little dippy, Scissor Bill, he has a funny face, Scissor Bill should drown in Mississippi, He is the missing link that Darwin tried to trace. 16And scissor Bill, he couldn’t live without the booze, He sits around all day and spits tobacco juice. He takes a deck of cards and tries to beat the Chink! Yes, Bill would be a smart guy if he only could think. And Scissor Bill, he says, “This country must be freed From Niggers, Japs and Dutchman and the gol durn Swede.” He says that every cop would be a native son If it wasn’t for the Irishman, the sonna fur gun. Scissor Bill, the “foreigner” is cussin; Scissor Bill, he says: “I hate a Coon”; Scissor Bill is down on everybody The Hottentots, the bushmen and the man in the moon. Don’t try to talk your union dope to Scissor Bill, He says he never organized and never will. He always will be satisfied until he’s dead, With coffee and a doughnut and a lousy old bed. And Bill, he says, he gets rewarded thousand fold, When he gets up to heaven on the streets of gold. But I don’t care who knows it, and right here I’ll tell, If Scissor Bill is goin’ to Heaven, I’ll go to Hell. Scissor Bill, he wouldn’t join the union, Scissor Bill, he says, “Not me, by Heck!” Scissor Bill gets his reward in Heaven, Oh! sure. He’ll get it, but he’ll get it in the neck. For every dollar the parasite has and didn’t work for there’s a slave who worked for a dollar he didn’t get. 17DUMP THE BOSSES OFF YOUR BACK By John Brill (Tune: “Take It to the Lord in Prayer”) Are you poor, forlorn and hungry? Are there lots of things you lack? Is your life made up of misery? Then dump the bosses off your back. Are your clothes all patched and tattered? Are you living in a shack? Would you have your troubles scattered? Then dump the bosses off your back. Are you almost split asunder? Loaded like a long-eared jack? Boob—why don’t you buck like thunder? And dump the bosses off your back? All the agonies you suffer, You can end with one good whack— Stiffen up, you orn'ry duffer— And dump the bosses off your back. ALL HELL CAN’T STOP US! (Tune: “Hold the Fort”) (Written by Ralph H. Chaplin, in Leavenworth Pen.) Now the final battle rages; Tyrants quake with fear. Rulers of the New Dark Ages Know THEIR end is near. 18CHORUS Scorn to take the crumbs they drop us; All is ours by right! Onward, men! All Hell oan’t stop us! Crush the Parasite! With a world-wide revolution Bring them to your feet! They of crime and persecution— They must work to eat! Tear the mask of lies asunder; Let the truth be known; With a voice of angry thunder, Rise and claim your own! Down with Greed and Exploitation; Tyranny must fall! Hail to Toil’s Emancipaion; Labor shall be all. UP FROM YOUR KNEES By Ralph H. Chaplin (Air: “Song of a Thuosand Years”) Up from your knees, ye cringing serf men! What have ye gained by whines and tears? Rise! they can never break our spirits Though they should try a thousand years, CHORUS A thousand years, then speed the victory! Nothing can stop us nor dismay. After the winter comes the springtime; After the darkness comes the day. 19/ Break ye your chains; strike off your fetters; Beat them to swords—the foe appears— Slaves of the world, arise and crush him; Crush him or serve a thousand years. Join in the fight—the Final Battle. Welcome the fray with ringing cheers. These are the times all freemen dreamed of— Fought to attain a thousand years. Be ye prepared; be not unworthy, — • Greater the task when triumph nears. Master the earth, O Men of Labor,— Long have ye learned—a thousand years. Over the hills the sun is rising. Out of the gloom the light appears. See! at your feet the world is waiting,— Bought with your blood a thousand years. THE TRAMP By Joe Hill Tune: “Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, the Boys Are Marching.” If you all will shut your trap, I will tell you ’bout a chap, That was broke and up against it too, for fair; He was not the kind to shirk, He was looking hard for work, But he heard the same old story everywhere. 20CHORUS Tramp, tramp, tramp, keep on a-tramping, Nothing doing here for you; If I catch you ’round again, You will wear the ball and chain, Keep on tramping, that’s the best thing you can do. He walked up and down the street, Till the shoes fell off his feet. In a house he spied a lady cooking stew, And he said, “How do you do, May I chop some wood for you?” What the lady told him made him feel so blue. ’Cross the street a sign he read, “Work for Jesus” so it said, And he said, “Here is my chance, I’ll surely try,” And he kneeled upon the floor, Till his knees got rather sore, But at eating-time he heard the preacher cry— Down the street he met a cop, And the copper made him stop, And he asked him, “When did you blow into town Come with me up to the judge,” But the judge he said, “Oh fudge, Bums that have no money needn’t come around.” Finally came that happy day When his life did pass away, He was sure he’d go to heaven when he died, When he reached the pearly gate, Santa Peter, mean old skate, Slammed the gate right in his face and loudly cried: 21WHADDA YA WANT TO BREAK YOUR BACK FOR THE BOSS FOR? (Tune: “What Do You Want to Make Those Eyes at Me For?”) Toiling along in light from morn ’til night, Wearin’ away your all for the Parasite; Workin’ like a mule with a number two, Puffin’ like a bellow when the day is through; Steering a load of gravel through the muck and slop Packing a hod o’ mustard ’til you damn near flop; Trying to bust a gut for two twenty-five, Pluggin’ like a sucker ’til five. CHORUS So whadda ya want to break your back for the boss for, When it don’t mean life to you? Do you think it right to struggle day and night, And plow like Hell for the Parasite? So whadda ya want to break your back for the boss for, When there’s more in life for you? Slow up Bill! that’s the way to beat the System; Join the Wobbly Gang, they’ve got the bosses guessing. So whadda ya want to break your back for the boss for, When it don’t mean life to you? Do it all today and you’ll soon find out, Tomorrow there’ll be nothing but to hang about, Looking at the “job sign,” wondering why you rave, With a wrinkle on your belly like an ocean wave; Doughnuts then begin to hang a little high, You’re pinched by the Bull for a “German spy”; You’re nothing but a bum!, says the Judge with a smile, Thirty days on the Rock pile. 22THE WHITE SLAVE By Joe Hill (Air: “Meet Me Tonight in Dreamland”) One little girl, fair as a pearl, Worked every day in a laundry; All that she made, for food she paid, So she slept on a park bench so soundly; An old procuress spied her there, She came and whispered in her ear: CHORUS Come with me now, my girly, Don’t sleep out in the cold; Your face and tresses curly Will bring you fame and gold, Automobiles to ride in, diamonds and silk to wear You’ll be a star bright, down in the red light, You’ll make your fortune there. Same little girl, no more a pearl, Walks all alone ,long the river, Five years have flown, her health is gone, She would look at the water and shiver, Whene’er she’d stop to rest and sleep, She’d hear a voice call from the deep: Girls in this way, fall every day, And have been falling for ages, Who is to blame? You know his name, It’s the boss that pays starvation wages. A homeless girl can always hear Temptations calling everywhere. 23THE BIG QUESTION (Air: “America”) By T-B-S. My Job—now is no more The boss has slam’d the door; What shall I do? Seem’s like my end is near, My guts feel awful queer— «1 Where do we go from here? —This is up to you. No, I’ve not lost a leg, —Why must I starve and beg? What Shall I Do? Where can the answer lurk? Why am I out of work, Gazing on all this murk? This is up to you. I can not stand alone, Masters have laid me prone; What Shall I Do? Why can’t we hand in hand, Reclaim our right to stand, Unhorse the sleek brigand? This is up to you. Dedicated to the Open Shop drive, 1921. The workers can never be free until they blow the whistle for the parasites to go to work. 24SOLIDARITY FOREVER! By Ralph H. Chaplin (Tune: “John Brown’s Body”) When the Union’s inspiration through the worker’s blood shall run, There can be no power greater anywhere beneath the sun. Yet what force on earth is weaker than the feeble strength of one ? But the Union makes us strong. CHORUS Solidarity forever! Solidarity forever! Solidarity forever! But the Union makes us strong. Is there aught we hold in common with the greedy parasite Who would lash us into serfdom and would crush us with his might? Is there anything left for us but to organize and fight? For the Union makes us strong. It is we who plowed the prairies; built the cities where they trade. Dug the mines and built the workshops; endless miles of railroad laid. Now we stand, outcast and starving, ’mid the wonders we have made; But the Union makes us strong. All the world that’s owned by idle drones, is ours and ours alone. We have laid the wide foundations; built it skywards, stone by stone. 25It is ours, not to slave in, but to master and to own, While the Union makes us strong. They have taken untold millions that they never toiled to earn. But without our brain and muscle not a single wheel can turn. We can break their haughty power; gain our freedom when we learn That the Union makes us strong. In our hands is placed a power greater than their hoarded gold; Greater than the might of armies, magnified a thousand fold. We can bring to birth the new world from the ashes of the old, For the Union makes us strong. THE DOLLAR ALARM CLOCK By John Healy (Air: “Old Oaken Bucket”) How dear to my heart are those chimes in the morning, That yank me from bed with melodious thrill; How sweet is the sound of the regular warning That yells that it’s time that I hike to the mill. Without it I’d sleep till the sun had arisen Be late to the job that my boss lets me use; Get canned, perhaps steal, maybe land in a prison If the chimes didn’t hustle me out of my snooze. 26CHORUS The faithful alarm clock The rattling alarm clock; The dollar alarm clock That rests on my shelf. What a blessing it was when the thing was invented It beats the slave-driver who came with his stick; It rests on the shelf in the shack that I rented It never gets htlngry; it never gets sick. If overly weary I take a tin bucket And place the alarm clock down into the thing, When it chimes in the morning it doubles the racket; It would wake up the dead when the two of them ring. Sometimes the good woman gets worn out and weary And says we are hauling too much of a load, I tell her the journey would look still more dreary If the dollar alarm clock should fail to explode. Then here’s to my booster that only needs winding, And here’s to the victim that just keeps alive. The boss gets the money and I do the grinding; The clock starts the circus at quarter past five. The present is distinctively an industrial epoch in world history. There can be no democracy in a world ruled by industrial despots. The I. W. W. stands for the only REAL democracy—Industrial Democracy. One worker on the job is ־worth a dozen in the jungles. 27WE HAVE FED YOU ALL FOR A THOUSAND YEARS Poem—By an Unknown Proletarian. Music—By Rudolph von Liebich, of the General Recruiting Union, Chicago, and Composer of Music for the Working Class. We have fed you all, for a thousand years And you hail us still unfed, Though there’s never a dollar of all your wealth But marks the worker’s dead. We have yielded our best to give you rest And you lie on crimson wool. Then if blood be the price of all your wealth, Good God! We have paid it in full. There is never a mine blown skyward now But we’re buried alive for you. There’s never a wreck drifts shoreward now But we are its ghastly crew. Go reckon our dead by the forges red And the factories where we spin. If blood be the price of your cursed wealth Good God! We have paid it in. We have fed you all for a thousand years— For that was our doom, you know, From the days when you chained us in your fields To the strike of a week ago. You have taken our lives, and our babies and wives, And we’re told it’s your legal share; But if blood be the price of your lawful wealth Good God! We have bought it fair. 28I’M TOO OLD TO BE A SCAB (Air: “Just Before the Battle, Mother”) By T-B-S. Good-bye, master, I must leave you, Something tells me I must go, For you know I can’t deceive you, Going wage is too darn low. Yes, you say that you will feed me If I chop that hardwood cord; —Do not to temptation lead me, I’m not toiling for my board. Though my trials have been sundry, I must e’er disdain to moan And although I’m awful hungry, I would leave “your work” alone. Yes, I fear I cannot tarry— And I know just how you feel But you see, if I’m to marry I must earn a double meal. If I work for bread and lodging While the sun is high and warm; It would cause me sundry dodging Through the winter’s cold and storm. I must have the all that’s in it— In the labor that I sell; For you cannot tell what minute It may start to rain like hell. 29One more question, boss, one only— As you count your wealth untold Would you have me save bologny— ’Gainst the day when I am old? Now we understand each other (As we play the game of grab) But, please do recall, “my brother” I’m too old to be a scab. MR. BLOCK By Joe Hill (Air: “It Looks to Me Like a Big Time Tonight”) Please give me your attention, I’ll introduce to you A man that is a credit to “Our Red, White and Blue”; His head is made of lumber, and solid as a rock; He is a common worker and his name is Mr. Block. And Block he thinks he may Be President some day. CHORUS Oh, Mr. Block, you were born by mistake, You take the cake, You make me ache. Tie on a rock to your block and then jump in the lake, Kindly do that for Liberty’s sake. Yes, Mr. Block is lucky; he found a job, by gee! The sharks got seven dollars, for job and fare and fee. They shipped him to a desert and dumped him with his truck, But when he tried to find his job, he sure was out of luck. He shouted, “That’s too raw, I’ll fix them with the law.” 30Block hiked back to the city, but wasn’t doing well. He said, I’ll join the union—the great A. F. of L.” He got a job next morning, got fired in the night, He said, “I’ll see Sam Gompers and he’ll fix that foreman right.” ‘ Sam Gompers said, “You see, You’ve got our sympathy.” Election day he shouted, “A Socialist for Mayor!” The “comrade” got elected, he happy was for fair, But after the election he got an awful shock. A great big socialistic Bull did rap him on the block. And Comrade Block did sob, “I helped him to his job.” Poor Block, he died one evening, I’m very glad to state; He climbed the golden ladder up to the pearly gate. He said, “Oh, Mr. Peter, one word I’d like to tell, I’d like to meet the Astorbilts and John D. Rockefell.” Old Pete said, “Is that so? You’ll meet them down below.” THE INDUSTRIAL WORKERS OF THE WORLD By Laura Payne Emerson. (Air: Wabash Cannonball) I stood by a city prison, In the twilight’s deepening gloom, Where men and women languished In a loathsome, living tomb. They were singing! And their voices Seemed to weave a wreath of light, As the words came clear with meaning: “Workers of the World, unite!” 31As it was with Galileo, And all thinkers of the past, So with these Industrial Workers, Tyrants’ shackles hold them fast. In the bastiles of the nations, They are bludgeoned, mugged and starved, While upon their aching bodies Prints of whips and clubs are carved. Yet with spirits still unbroken And with hope for future years They are calling to their fellows: “Come, arise! and dry your tears. Wake, ye toilers, get in action, Break your bonds, exert your might— You can make this hell a heaven, Workers of the World, unite!” Hail! ye brave Industrial Workers, Vanguard of the coming day, When labor’s hosts shall cease to cringe And shall dash their chains away. How the masters dread you, hate you, Their uncompromising foe; For they see in you a menace, Threatening soon their overthrow. “Yaas,” said the farmer reflectively, “all the 1. W. W. fellers I’ve met seem to be pretty decent lads, but them ‘alleged I. W. W.’s” must be holy frights.” 32THE WORKERS’ MARSELLLAISE Ye sons of toil, awake to glory! Hark, hark, what myriads bid you rise; Your children, wives and grandsires hoary— Behold their tears and hear their cries! Behold their tears and hear their cries! Shall hateful tyrants mischief breeding, With hireling hosts, a ruffian band— Affright and desolate the land, • While peace and liberty lie bleeding? CHORUS To arms! to arms! ye brave! ״..Th’ avenging sword unsheathe! March on, march on, all hearts resolved On Victory or Death. With luxury and pride surrounded, The vile, insatiate despots dare, Their thirst for gold and power unbounded To mete and vend the light and air, To mete and vend the light and air, Like beasts of burden, would they load us, Like gods would bid their slaves adore, But man is man, and who is more? Then shall they longer lash and goad us? O, Liberty can man resign thee? Once having felt thy generous flame, Can dungeon’s bolts and bars confine thee? Or whips, thy noble spirit tame? Or whips, thy noble spirit tame? Too long the world has wept bewailing, That Falsehood’s dagger tyrants wield; But Freedom is our sword and shield; And all their arts are unavailing! 33“REMEMBER” (Tune: ״Hold the Fort”) We speak to you from jail today Two hundred union men, We’re here because the bosses’ laws Bring slavery again. CHORUS In Chicago’s darkened dungeons For the O. B. U. Remember you’re outside for us While we’re in here for you. We’re here from mine and mill and rail We’re here from off the sea, From coast to coast we make the boast Of Solidarity. We laugh and sing, we have no fear Our hearts are always light, We know that every Wobbly true Will carry on the fight. We make a pledge—no tyrant might Can make us bend the knee, Come on, you worker, organize, And fight for Liberty.. HARRISON GEORGE Cook County Jail, Oct. 18, 1917 An ounce of ORGANIZATION is worth a ton of talk; join the One Big Union and help to free yourself and your class from wage slavery. 34INDUSTRIAL UNIONISM SPEAKS TO TOILERS OF THE SEA By Harold R. Johnston (Air: “Stung Right”) “You men who toil upon the ships— The ships of every sea— Come bear to me your grievances, Your tales of misery; For I am strong and good and great, The trusts must bow to me; For I shall take all workers in And׳'bring them victory.” CHORUS Seamen! Come all—join the O. B. U.! Fearless fighters, every one, and true! For, when we are all lined up, in the industry, Labor will be master, over the sea! “You’ve weathered storms upon the deck, 0, Toilers of the Sea; You’ve fallen in the fire-holes In the days that used to be. But now the times must change about, A New Day must appear When all you Toilers of the Sea, Begin to see and hear.” 35“I speak to you, O Workingmen, 0, Toilers of the Sea; Come organize one union great — The shipping industry. When you are thusly organized, With others like your own, The One Big Union of the World Shall rule the earth, ALONE!” THE PREACHER AND THE SLAVE By Joe Hill (Tune: “Sweet Bye and Bye”) Long-haired preachers come out every night, Try to tell you what’s wrong and what’s right; But when asked how ’bout something to eat They will answer with voices so sweet: CHORUS You will eat, bye and bye, In that glorious land above the sky; Work and pray, live on hay, You’ll get pie in the sky when you die. And the starvation army they play, And they sing and they clap and they pray, Till they get all your coin on the drum, Then they tell you when you’re on the bum: Holy Rollers and Jumpers come out, And they holler, they jump and they shout “Give your money to Jesus,” they say, “He will cure all diseases today.” 36If you fight hard for children and wife— Try to get something good in this life— You’re a sinner and had man, they tell, When you die you will sure go to hell. Workingmen of all countries, unite, Side by side we for freedom will fight: When the world and its wealth we have gained To the grafters we’ll sing this refrain: LAST CHORUS You Will eat, bye and bye, When you’ve learned how to cook and to fry; Chop some wood, ’twill do you good, And you’ll eat in the sweet bye and bye. “THE POPULAR WOBBLY” (Air: “They Go Wild, Simply Wild Over Me”) By T-Bone Slim I’m as mild manner’d man as can be And I’ve never done them harm that I can see, Still on me they put a ban and they threw me in the can,. They go wild, simply wild over me. They accuse me of ras—cal—i—ty But I can’t see why they always pick on me, I’m as gentle as a lamb, but they take me for a ram, They go wild, simply wild over me. 37Oh the “bull” he went wild over me And he held his gun where everyone could see, He was breathing rather hard when he saw my union card— He went wild, simply wild over me. Then the judge he went wild over me And I plainly saw we never would agree, So I let the man obey what his conscience had to say, He went wild, simply wild over me. Oh the jailer went wild over me And he locked me up and threw away the key— It seems to be the rage so they keep me in a cage, They go wild, simply wild over me. They go wild, simply wild over me, I’m referring to the bed-bug and the flea, They disturb my slumber deep and I murmur in my sleep, They go wild, simply wild over me. Even God, he went wild over me, This I found out when I knelt upon my knee, Did he hear my humble yell? No, he told me “Go to hell,” He went wild, simply wild over me. Will the roses grow wild over me When I’m gone to the land that is to be? When my soul and body part in the stillness of my heart— Will the roses grow wild over me? 38“RENUNCIATION״ (Air: “Auld Lang Syne”) By Joachim Raucher When hungry millions are unfed And the little orphans weep, I cannot eat in peace my bread, Nor sing my grief to sleep. When thoughts arising from the heart Are hampered in their flight,. I cannot sit and muse apart Upon a dreamy height. When craven lies oft seek to blind The eyes of blazing Truth, I cannot turn my maddened mind To songs of love and youth, Nor can I sing in lyric strains Of private, little woes, When Greed is reaping golden gains From bloody seeds it sows. “For my part, I sympathize with them. While they are threatened and imprisoned, 1 am manacled. If they are denied a living wage, I, too, am defrauded. While they are industrial slaves I cannot be free. My hunger is not satisfied while they are hindered and neglected. When they are flung out on a desert under a scorching sun, I too, bum, and my soul is athirst. When one of them is dragged from his bed and hung to a railroad trestle, a great horror of darkness falls upon my spirit, and from the depths of my heart I cry out against those who persecute the weak and unfriended.”—Helen Keller. 39DON’T TAKE MY PAPA AWAY FROM ME Words and Music by Joe Hill (Written just before his execution) A little girl with her father stayed, in a cabin across the sea, Her mother dear in the cold grave lay; with her father she’d always be— But then one day the great war broke out and the father was told to go; The little girl pleaded—her father she needed. She begged, cried and pleaded so: CHORUS Don’t take my papa away from me, don’t leave me there all alone. He has cared for me so tenderly, ever since mother was gone. Nobody ever like him can be, no one can so with me play. Don’t take my papa away from me; please don’t take papa away. Her tender pleadings were all in vain, and her father went to the war. He’ll never kiss her good night again, for he fell ’mid the cannons’ roar. Greater soldier was never born, but his brave heart was pierced one day; And as he was dying, he heard some one crying, A girl’s voice far away: 40WHEN YOU WEAR THAT BUTTON (Tune: “When You Wore a Tulip”) By Richard Brazier I met him in Dakota when the harvesting was o’er, A “Wob” he was, I saw by the button that he wore. He was talking to a bunch of slaves in the jungles near the tracks; He said, “You guys whose hoes are on your backs; Why don’t you stick together with the ‘Wobblies’ in one band And fight to change conditions for the workers in this land?” CHORUS When you wear that button, the “Wobblies” red button And carry their red, red card, No need to hike, boys, along these old pikes, boys, Every “Wobbly” will be your pard. The boss will be leery, the “stiffs” will be cheery When we hit John Farmier hard, They’ll all be affrighted, when we stand united And carry that Red, Red Card. The “stiffs” all seemed delighted, when they heard him talk that way. They said, “We need more pay, and a shorter working day.” The “Wobbly” said, “You’ll get these things without the slightest doubt . If you’ll organize to knock the bosses out. If you’ll join the One Big Union, and wear their badge of liberty You’ll strike the blow all slaves must strike if they would be free.” 41MY WANDERING BOY Where is my wandering boy tonight? The boy of his mother’s pride, He’s counting the ties with his bed on his back Or else he is bumming a ride. CHORUS Oh, where is my boy tonight? Oh, where is my boy tonight? He’s on the head end of an overland train— That’s where your boy is tonight. II His heart may be pure as the morning dew, But his clothes are a sight to see. He’s pulled for a vag, his excuse won’t do. “Thirty days,” says the judge, you see. Oh, where is my boy tonight? Oh, where is my boy tonight? The chilly wind blows, to the lock-up he goes, That’s where your boy is tonight. III “I was looking for work, Oh judge,” he said. Says the judge, “I have heard that before.” So to join the chain gang far off—he is led To hammer the rocks some more. Oh, where is my boy tonight? Oh, where is my boy tonight? To strike many blows for the country he goes, That’s where your boy is tonight. 42IV Don’t search for your wandering boy tonight, Let him play the old game if he will— A worker, or bum, he’ll ne’er be right, So long’s he’s a wage slave still. Oh where is my boy tonight? His money is “out of sight.” Wherever he “blows,” up against it he goes, Here’s luck!—to your boy tonight. THE EVERETT COUNTY JAIL (Tune: “Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, the Boys are Marching”) By William Whalen In the prison cell we sit Are we broken hearted—•nit. We’re as happy and as cheerful as can be, For we know that every Wob Will be busy on the job, Till they swing the prison doors and set us free. CHORUS Are you busy, Fellow Workers, Are your shoulders to the wheel? Get together for the cause And some day you’ll make the laws, It’s the only way to make the masters squeal. 43Though the living is not grand, Mostly mush and “coffee and,” It’s as good as we expected when we came. It’s the way they treat the slave In this free land of the brave, There is no one but the working class to blame When McRae, and Veith, and Black To the Lumberyards go back May they travel empty handed as they came. j\Iay they turn in their report That the Wobs still hold the fort, That a rebel is an awful thing to tame. When the 65 per cent That they call the “working gent” Organizes in a Union of its class, We will then get what we’re worth That will be the blooming earth. Organize and help to bring the thing to pass. I WANNA FREE MISS LIBERTY (Air: “Sunny Tennessee”) By T-B-S. While the moon was softly shining On my cot, as I lay pining, Thinking of the day—long passed away; Came a drowsy feeling o’er me— And Joe Hill stood there before me— I seem’d to hear this joyous fighter say: 44CHORUS I came to free Miss Liberty, from the bonds of slavery; From mock Democracy; from inequality; I want to feel no Iron Heel shall disgrace our peaceful shore; That all the world miay do away with war— I love to dream the old, old dream, that tomorrow I will find Men of a kindred mind—who love their fellow kind. I long to make this plea, say not that it cannot he, I want to see the whole world free from the chains of slavery. II Let us then be up and doing— Greater Times and things are brewing Oh, Organize!—The One Big Union Way: “Workers of the world, awaken.” “All the wealth you make is taken.” “Break your chains.” 1 hear the spirit say: III Tighter are the class lines drawing— Hunger at our vitals gnawing— My reason sways and I long to pray? Rises then again before us Spectres of a Martyred chorus— I seem to hear these sterling fighters say: Industrial Unionism is the royal road to Industrial Freedom. 45MAY DAY SONG Words by Ralph Chaplin Music by Rudolph von Liebich 0, Labor Day, 0, First of May, Welcomed and honored on land and on sea. Winter so drear must disappear, Fair days are coming for you and for me. We, of the old world, building the New, Ours is the will and the power to do; Then let us sing, hail to the Spring— Hail to the Day we can strike to be free! Banner so red, high overhead, Hated and feared by the powers that be! In every land firmly we stand; Men of all nations who labor are we. Under one banner, standing as one, Claiming the earth and our place in the sun. Then let us sing, hail to the Spring— Hail to the Day we can strike to be free! 0, Labor Day, O, First of May, Warm with the gleam of the bright days to be! Join in the throng,. fearless and strong— One mighty Union of world industry. Shoulder to shoulder, each in his place, Ours is the hope of the whole human race. Then let us sing, hail to the Spring— Hail to the Day we can strike to be free! 46THEY’LL SOON RING OUT By John E. Nordquist (Air: Where the Sunset Turns the Ocean’s Blue to Gold) We are looking for that time, When the bells of earth shall chime To proclaim a world of workers really free. I can see that joyous day Not so very far away And the vision puts a hopeful heart in me. I can see the wage slave free, With his children by his knee, And his darling wife is bubbling o’er with cheer; And the childish faces smile, Nothing can their joy defile, For they hear the bells of freedom ringing clear. CHORUS Oh I hear those free bells ringing And the toilers all are singing, For the miseries of the past have flown away. And a worker’s world I see, Where no misery can be; How I long to hear those bells on Freedom’s Day. If you wish to speed those times, If you long to hear those chimes, Do your part in organizing all the slaves. If we’re going to see that day You must help to clear the way; 47We must end the reign of cap’talistic knaves. We must capture industry, All the ships upon the sea— Ev’ry fact’ry, mine and mill, we’re going to take. When the boss gets overalls, Then the cause of mis’ry falls And those sleeping bells of freedom shall awake. ONWARD, “ONE BIG UNION!״ By Ralph Cheney (To be sung to the tune of “Onward, Christian Soldiers”) Onward, One Big Union, Joy and justice led, With the Free Society Shining out ahead! Freedom, our one master, Leads against the foe. REFRAIN Gates of jails can never ’Gainst our will prevail. We’ve the world’s one power; And we cannot fail. Forward unto battle We, the workers, go. Onward, One Big Union, Joy and justice led With the free society Shining out ahead! War and wrong shall perish, Poverty shall cease. Hatred, wrath, and slavery Yield to joy and peace. 48COUNT YOUR WORKERS—COUNT THEM! (Air: “Count Your Blessings”) An employment shark one day I went to see, And he said, “Come in and buy a job from me; Just a couple of dollars for an office fee, But the job is steady—and the fare is free.” CHORUS Count your pennies— count them one by one, Then you’ll plainly see how “easy you are done.” Count your pennies, take them in your hand, Sneak into a “Jap’s” and get a coffee and— II I shipped out—and worked—and slept in lousy bunks, And the grub!—It stunk as bad as nineteen skunks. When I worked a week the boss he said one day, “You’re too tired, you’re fired, go and get your pay.” III When I went to get my pay, Oh, Holy Gee! Road and School and Poll tax—and Hospital fee, Then I nearly fainted and I lost my sense . . . When the clerk he said, “You owe me fifty cents.” IV When I got back to town with blisters on my feet, There I saw a fellow speaking on the street, And he said, it is the workers’ own mistake— If they’d stick together they’d get all they make! 49V And he says, Who’ll come and join our union grand, Who will be the first—to join our “fighting” band? Write me out a card, says 1, right here, by gee! The Industrial Workers is the “dope” for me! CHORUS Count your workers, count them one by one Stand! we’ll show the bosses how it’s really done— Stand together, Workers—Hand in Hand! Then—you’ll never have to live on coffee and— FIFTY THOUSAND LUMBERJACKS (Tune: “Portland County Jail”) Fifty thousand lumberjacks, fifty thousand packs, Fifty thousand dirty rolls of blankets on their backs, Fifty thousand minds made up to strike and strike like men; For fifty years they’ve “packed” a bed, but never will again. CHORUS “Such a lot of devils,” that’s what the papers say— They’ve gone on strike for shorter hours and some in- crease in pay. They left the camps, the lazy tramps, they all walked out as one; They say they’ll win the strike or put the bosses on the bum.” 50Fifty thousand wooden bunks full of things that crawl; Fifty thousand restless men have left them once for all. One by one they dared not say, “Fat, the hours are long.” If they did, they’d hike—but now they’re fifty thousand strong. Fatty Rich, we know you’re game, know your pride is pricked. Say—but why not be a man, and own when you are licked ? They’ve joined the One Big Union—Gee! For goodness sake, “Get wise!” The more you try to buck them now the more they organize. Take a tip and start right in—plan some cozy rooms, Six or eight spring beds in each, with towels, sheets and brooms; Shower baths for men who work keeps them well and fit. A laundry, too, and drying room, would help a little bit. Get some dishes, white and clean; good pure food to eat. See that cook has help enough to keep the table neat. Tap the bell for eight hours’ work; treat the boys like men, And fifty thousand lumberjacks may come to work again. Men who work should be well paid. “A man’s a man for a’ that.” Many a man has a home to keep same as yourself, Old Fat. Mothers, sisters, sweethearts, wives, children, too, galore, Stand behind the men to win this bread and butter war. 51TIE ’EM UP! Words and Music by G. G. Allen I We have no fight with brothers of the old A. F. of L. But we ask you to use your reason with the facts we have to tell. Your craft is but protection for a form of property, The skill that you are losing, don’t you see. Improvements on machinery take your tool and skill away, And you’ll be among the common slaves upon some fateful day. Now the things of which we’re talking we are mighty sure about— So what’s the use to strike the way you can’t win out? CHORUS Tie ’em up! tie ’em up; that’s the way to Don’t notify the bosses till hostilities begin, win. Don’t furnish chance for gunmen, scabs like; and all their What you need is One Big 'Union and Strike. the One Big II Why do you make agreements that divide you when you fight, And let the■ bosses bluff you with the contract’s “sacred right,” Why stay at work when other crafts are battling with the foe, You must stick together don’t you know. 52Ill The day when you begin to see the classes waging• war You can join in the biggest tie-up that was ever known before. When the strikes all o’er the country are united into one Then the workers One Big Union all the wheels shall run. JOE HILL’S LAST WILL (Written in his cell, November 18, 1915, on the eve of his execution.) My will is easy to decide, For there is nothing to divide. My kin don’t need to fuss and moan— “Moss does not cling to a rolling stone.” My body? Ah, if I could choose, I would to ashes it reduce, And let the merry breezes blow My dust to where some flowers grow. Perhaps some fading flower then Would come to life and bloom again. This is my last and final will. Good luck to all of you, JOE HILL. Why should any worker be without the necessities of life when ten men can produce enough for a hundred ? Why does a short work day and a long pay always go together? 53THE MYSTERIES OF A HOBO’S LIFE (Air: “The Girl I Left Behind Me”) I took a job on an extra gang1, Way up in the mountain, I paid my fee and the shark shipped me And the ties I soon was counting. The boss he put me driving spikes And the sweat was enough to blind me, He didn’t seem to like my pace, So I left the job behind me. II I grabbed a hold of an old freight train And around the country traveled, The mysteries of a hobo’s life To me were soon unraveled. 1 traveled east and I traveled west And the “shacks” could never find me, Next morning I was miles away From the job I left behind me. III I ran across a bunch of “stiffs” Who were known as Industrial Workers, They taught me how to be a man— And how to fight the shirkers. I kicked right in and joined the bunch And now in the ranks you’ll find me. Hurrah for the cause—To hell with the boss! And the job I left behind me. 54WORKERS’ MEMORIAL SONG (Air: Russian Funeral March-Pochoronii Marsh) Dying as soldiers fighting for Labor, so did you fall; An off’ring of your love for those who share the strife; Gladly you gave us talent and treasure; yielding your all. The honor of the world, your freedom and your life. Deeply you suffered nor shrunk from the grave— Judges and hangmen, the fate of the fray; Starved in dark dungeons, beaten and tortured—cheerful and brave — Defying chains and jails, you marched upon your way. Mad with their blood-lust, rich from our labor, exploiters dwell In luxury and splendor; scornful of our power Sweeping to triumph trusting no promise—Heaven or Hell; This song of sorrow sounds to them their fatal hour. Rise now ye workers rebellious and bold; Tyrants no longer shall rule from above; We are the builders—no one shall suffer hunger and cold — We bring a world of beauty, liberty and love. Farewell, true comrades, death now enfolds you—rest in the tomb; As sleeping there in peace you know no more of pain. Farewell, true comrades, we will remember you and your doom, And labor soon will prove that none have died in vain. Farewell, true comrades, we rise to the fight; O’er-sweeping all ’neath the banner ye bore, Slavery and sorrow vanish before us. Toilers, Unite! To break your bonds and rule the world for evermore. (Repeat the last four lines of the last stanza.) 55FAREWELL, FRANK! (Air: “Barcarolle” from the “Tales of Hoffman”) By Gerald J. Lively You’ve fought your fight, a long good night Is all that we can say. Sleep on, sleep on, your work is done Brave fighter for the Day. Kind Mother Earth who gave you birth Receives you to her breast. For us the Fight, for you the night, The night of well earned rest, No more you’ll feel the cling of steel, You’ve burst the prison bars, You gave your life in this our strife, Brave conqueror of stars. Sleep on, sleep on, your work is done, Sleep on, sleep on, sleep on.THE COMMONWEALTH OF ,TOIL (Air: “Nellie Grey”) By Ralph Chaplin In the gloom of mighty cities Mid the roar of whirling wheels, We are toiling on like chattel slaves of old, And our masters hope to keep us Ever thus beneath their heels, And to coin our very life blood into gold. CHORUS But we have a glowing dream Of how fair the world will seem When each man can live his life secure and free. When the earth is owned by Labor And there’s joy and peace for all In the commonwealth of Toil that is to be. II They would keep us cowed and beaten Cringing meekly at their feet. They would stand between each worker and his bread. Shall we yield our lives up to them For the bitter crust we eat? Shall we only hope for heaven when we’re dead? III They have laid our lives out for us To the utter end of time. Shall we stagger on beneath their heavy load? Shall we let them live forever In their gilded halls of crime With our children doomed to toil beneath their goad? 57IV When our cause is all triumphant And we claim our Mother Earth, And the nightmare of the present fades away. We shall live with Love and Laughter, We, who now are little worth, And we’ll not regret the price we have to pay. A WORKER’S PLEA (Air: “Tuck Me to Sleep”) By T-B-S. Old Kentucky cradled me—when I was young, Then Ohio hired me—I sure got stung, Night and day I’ve labored since— Shucking com and filling bins And now, they say, my long, long rest begins. CHORUS ’Tuck me to sleep in my old ’tucky home, Cover me with roses, gravel, anything but stone, Then let the dew drop a tear on my grave Like a token never spoken to a broken-hearted slave— I ain’t had a bit of rest—masters thought it wasn’t best; —Thought that I could rest the best—afer I “go west.” ‘Tuck me to bed in my old ’tucky home, Let me lay there—stay there, cover me up with loam. 58II Old Kentucky cradled me—’tis even true— Since I came to IOWAY, she worked me too, Every state in all this land Used me for a hired hand, But why I’m broke—I fail to understand. III Migratory working man, I’m on my way— I am done with sun and sand and new-mown hay; I have worked from sun to sun, Nothing have I ever won And now, thank God, my harvestng is done. ORGANIZE! (Tune: “The Green Fields of Dunmoor”) By James J. Ferriter Come all you exploited workingmen And fight for Freedom’s cause, For you are bound, both hand and foot, By capitalistic laws; Your voices you can raise no more, Your lips you now must seal, For if you rise to speak a word A gun-man’s at your heel. Come on, unite, my hearty boys, And fight the common foe; The rustling card with all its faults This time must surely go. The “seven days” and “safety first,” Alas, they are no more, So now’s your time to fall in line At Freedom’s onward roll. 59Our master is a “patriot” true, Red wealth he has galore, And all good things that Labor brings, He’s locked up in his store; But if, like men, you’ll organize, His reign will be no more, And he will go where he belongs A-shoveling copper ore. Remember, then, the six-hour day Must be our first demand; For miners from our ranks each day From death receive a call; The miner’s “con” you soon will see Will lose its deadly pall, And we’ll make this camp a grand old spot For the workers, one and all. THERE IS POWER IN A UNION By Joe Hill (Tune: “There Is Power in the Blood”) Would you have freedom from wage slavery, Then join in the grand Industrial band; Would you from mis’ry and hunger be free, Then come! Do your share, like a man. CHORUS There is pow’r, there is pow’r In a band of workingmen, When they stand hand in hand, • That’s a pow’r, that’s a pow’r That must rule in every land— One Industrial Union Grand. 60Would you have mansions of gold in the sky, And live in a shack, way in the back? Would you have wings up in heaven to fly, And starve here with rags on your back? If you’ve had “nuff” of “the blood of the lamb” Then join in the grand Industrial band; If, for a change, you would have eggs and ham, Then come, do your share, like a man. If you like sluggers to beat off your head, Then don’t organize, all unions despise, If you want nothing before you are dead, Shake hands with your boss and look wise. Come, all ye workers, from every land, Come, join in the grand Industrial band, Then we our share of this earth shall demand. Come on! Do your share, like a man. HARVEST LAND (Air: “Beulah Land”) By T-D and H. The harvest drive is on again, John Farmer needs a lot of men; To work beneath the Kansas heat And shock and stack and thresh his wheat 61CHORUS Oh Farmer John—Poor Farmer John, Our faith in you is over-drawn... —Old fossil of the Feudal Age, Your only creed is Going Wage---- “Bull Durham” will not buy our Brawn- You’re out of luck—poor farmer, Jawn. You advertise, in Omaha, “Come, leave the Valley of the Kaw.” Nebraska calls, “Don’t be misled.” “We’ll furnish you a feather bed!” Then South Dakota “lets a roar,” “We need ten thousand men—or more”; Our grain is turning־—prices drop! For God’s sake save our bumper crop.” In North Dakota—(I’ll be darn) The “wise guy” sleeps in “hoosier’s” barn —Then hoosier breaks into his snore And yells, “It’s quarter after four.” CHORUS Oh Harvest Land—Sweet Burning Sand! —As on the sun-kissed field I stand I look away across the plain And wonder if it’s going to rain- I vow, by all the Brands of Cain, That I will not be here again. 62HOLD THE FORT (English Transport Workers’ Strike Song) We meet today in Freedom’s cause, And raise our voices high; We’ll join our hands in union strong, To battle or to die. CHORUS Hold the fort for we are coming— Union men, be strong. Side by side we battle onward, Victory will come. Look my Comrades, see the union Banners waving high. Reinforcements now appearing, Victory is nigh. See our numbers still increasing; Hear the bugles blow. By our union we shall triumph Over every foe. Fierce and long the battle rages, But we will not fear. Help will come whene’er it’s needed, Cheer, my Comrades, cheer. 63WORKINGMEN, UNITE! By E. S. Nelson (Tune: “Red Wing”) Conditions they are bad, And some of you are sad; You cannot see your enemy, The class that lives in luxury,— You workingmen are poor,— Will be for evermore,—• As long as you permit the few To guide your destiny. CHORUS Shall we still be slaves and work for wages It is outrageous—has been for ages; This earth by right belongs to toilers, And not to spoilers of liberty. The master class is small, But they have lots of “gall.” When we unite to gain our right, If they resist we’ll use our might; There is no middle ground, This fight must be one round. To victory, for liberty, Our class is marching on! Workingmen, unite! We must put up a fight, To make us free from slavery And capitalistic tyranny; This fight is not in vain, We’ve got a world to gain. Will you be a fool, a capitalist tool, And serve your enemy? 64