| I am just a poor boy
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| Though my story’s seldom told
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| I have squandered my resistance
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| For a pocket full of mumbles such are promises
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| All lies and jests
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| Still a man hears what he wants to hear
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| And disregards the rest
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| When I left my home and my family
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| I was no more than a boy
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| In the company of strangers
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| In the quiet of the railway station running scared
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| Laying low
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| Seeking out the poorer quarters
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| Where the ragged people go
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| Looking for the places only they would know
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| Lie la lie …
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| Asking only workman’s wages
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| I come looking for a job
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| But I get no offers
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| Just a come-on from the whores on Seventh Avenue
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| I do declare
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| There were times when I was so lonesome
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| I took some comfort there
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| Lie la lie …
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| Then I’m laying out my winter clothes
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| And wishing I was gone
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| Going home
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| Where the New York City winters
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| Aren’t bleeding me
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| Leading me, going home
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| In the clearing stands a boxer
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| And a fighter by his trade
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| And he carries the reminders
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| Of ev’ry glove that layed him down
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| Or cut him till he cried out
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| In his anger and his shame
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| «I am leaving, I am leaving»
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| But the fighter still remains
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| Lie la lie … |