You never come back. I say good-by when I see you going in the doors, The hopeless open doors that call and wait And take you then for--how many cents a day? How many cents for the sleepy eyes and fingers? I say good-by because I know they tap your wrists, In the dark, in the silence, day by day, And all the blood of you drop by drop, And you are old before you are young. You never come back.
2 Sandburg Songs
by Myron Silberstein (b. 1975)
1. Mill‑Doors
Text Authorship:
- by Carl Sandburg (1878 - 1967), "Mill-Doors", appears in Chicago Poems, first published 1916
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Researcher for this text: Emily Ezust [Administrator]2. They Will Say  [sung text not yet checked]
Of my city the worst that men will ever say is this: You took little children away from the sun and the dew, And the glimmers that played in the grass under the great sky, And the reckless rain; you put them between walls To work, broken and smothered, for bread and wages, To eat dust in their throats and die empty-hearted For a little handful of pay on a few Saturday nights.
Text Authorship:
- by Carl Sandburg (1878 - 1967), "They Will Say"
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Researcher for this text: Emily Ezust [Administrator]