| In the town of Springhill, Nova Scotia
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| Down in the dark of the Cumberland Mine
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| there’s blood on the coal and the miners lie
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| In the roads that never saw sun nor sky (2x)
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| In the town of Springhill, you don’t sleep easy
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| Often the earth will tremble and roll
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| When the earth is restless, miners die
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| Bone and blood is the price of coal
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| In the town of Springhill, Nova Scotia
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| Late in the year of fifty-eight
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| Day still comes and the sun still shines
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| But it’s dark as the grave in the Cumberland mine
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| Down at the coal face, miners working
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| Rattle of the belt and the cutter’s blade
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| Rumble of the rock and the walls closed round
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| The living and the dead men two miles down
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| Twelve men lay two miles from the pitshaft
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| Twelve men lay in the dark and sang
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| Long hot days in the miners tomb
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| It was three feet high and a hundred long
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| Three days past and the lamps gave out
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| Our foreman rose on his elbow and said
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| We’re out of light and water and bread
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| So we’ll live on song and hope instead
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| Listen for the shouts of the barefaced miners
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| Listen thru the rubble for a rescue team
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| Six hundred feet of coal and slag
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| Hope imprisoned in a three foot seam
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| Eight days passes and some were rescued
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| Leaving the dead to lie alone
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| Thru all their lives they dug their grave
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| Two miles of earth for a marking stone
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| In the town of Springhill, you don’t sleep easy
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| Often the earth will tremble and roll
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| When the earth is restless, miners die
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| Bone and blood is the price of coal
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| by Peggy Seeger, recorded by Ewan MacColl |