| From the pocket of an honest preacher
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| To the empty hand of a homeless bum
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| To the cash drawer at the liquor store
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| Where he bought a pint of rum
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| To the bank clerk who past me off
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| To the single mom trying to pay the rent
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| I can’t even count all the times
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| And all the ways I’ve been spent
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| I close my eyes and hold my breath
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| When the bad man steals me
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| And ruins my name
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| If I had my way I rather be
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| Passed off in the offering plate
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| I’ve been in the hands of a rich man
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| In a shoebox under a farmer’s bed
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| Help post the bail of a stubborn boy
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| Who could have walked but he fought instead
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| I’ve been torn in half over some silly bet
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| Taped back together and then they tossed me
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| In the case of a beggin' Cajun fiddler player
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| On Bourbon Street
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| Some people call me George
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| Some people worship the color green
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| I don’t really mind of course
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| I just like the company
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| 'Cause I’m sure one day
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| I’ll be a thing of the past
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| I’ll be sitting folded up
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| In some old woman’s hope chest
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| She’ll be telling her grand kids
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| How she used to spend me
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| On a pack of gum, and jackerjacks
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| A can of Coke and a quarter snack
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| And she’ll say «back then you could get so much for a dollar»
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| And they’ll say, «what's a dollar?»
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| But for now I’m sitting in a piggybank
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| Of an eight year old trying to buy a bike
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| I’m proud to be a dollar twenty three
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| On the way to thirty five
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| She pours us out onto the carpet
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| Counts us all then holds us tight
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| Then she puts us back in one by one
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| Blows a kiss then she says good night
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| And there ain’t tellin' where I’ll end up next
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| In a bra or a bible it’s anybody’s guess
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| Maybe in a bottle just floatin' in the water
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| Living the life of a dollar |