| I was walking by the graveyard, late last Friday night
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| I heard somebody yelling, it sounded like a fight
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| It was just a drunken hobo dancing circles in the night
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| Pouring whiskey on the headstones in the blue moonlight
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| So often have I wondered where these homeless brothers go
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| Down in some hidden valley were their sorrows cannot show
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| Where the police cannot find them, where the wanted men can go
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| There’s freedom when your walking, even though you’re walking slow
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| Smash your bottle on a gravestone and live while you can
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| That homeless brother is my friend
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| It’s hard to be a pack rat, it’s hard to be a 'bo
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| But living’s so much harder where the heartless people go
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| Somewhere the dogs are barking and the children seem to know
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| That Jesus on the highway was a lost hobo
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| And they hear the holy silence of the temples in the hill
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| And they see the ragged tatters as another kind of thrill
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| And they envy him the sunshine and they pity him the chill
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| And they’re sad to do their living for some other kind of thrill
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| Smash your bottle on a gravestone and live while you can
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| That homeless brother is my friend
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| Somewhere there was a woman, somewhere there was a child
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| Somewhere there was a cottage where the marigolds grew wild
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| But some where’s just like nowhere when you leave it for a while
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| You’ll find the broken-hearted when you’re travelling jungle-style
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| Down the bowels of a broken land where numbers live like men
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| Where those who keep their senses have them taken back again
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| Where the night stick cracks with crazy rage, where madmen don’t
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| Pretend
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| Where wealth has no beginning and poverty no end
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| Smash your bottle on a gravestone and live while you can
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| That homeless brother is my friend
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| The ghosts of highway royalty have vanished in the night
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| The Whitman wanderer walking toward a glowing inner light
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| The children have grown older and the cops have gripped us tight
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| There’s no spot round the melting pot for free men in their flight
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| And you who leave on promises and prosper as you please
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| The victim of your riches often dies of your disease
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| He can’t hear the factory whistle, just the lonesome freight train’s
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| Wheeze
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| He’s living on good fortune, he ain’t dying on his knees
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| Smash your bottle on a gravestone and live while you can
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| That homeless brother is my friend
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| That homeless brother is my friend |