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Johnny Cash

To Beat The Devil

 

To Beat The Devil

(álbum: Hello, I'm Johnny Cash - 1969)


And I'd like to dedicate this to John and June, who helped show me how to beat the devil.

It was winter time in Nashville, down on music city row.
And I was looking for a place to get myself out of the cold.
To warm the frozen feeling that was eating at my soul.
Keep the chilly wind off my guitar.

My thirsty wanted whisky; my hungry needed beans,
But it'd been of month of paydays since I'd heard that eagle scream.
So with a stomach full of empty and a pocket full of dreams,
I left my pride and stepped inside a bar.

Actually, I guess you'd could call it a Tavern:
Cigarette smoke to the ceiling and sawdust on the floor;
Friendly shadows.

I saw that there was just one old man sitting at the bar.
And in the mirror I could see him checking me and my guitar.
An' he turned and said: "Come up here boy, and show us what you are."
I said: "I'm dry." He bought me a beer.

He nodded at my guitar and said: "It's a tough life, ain't it?"
I just looked at him. He said: "You ain't making any money, are you?"
I said: "You've been reading my mail."
He just smiled and said: "Let me see that guitar.
"I've got something you oughta hear."
Then he laid it on me:

"If you waste your time a-talking to the people who don't listen,
"To the things that you are saying, who do you think's gonna hear.
"And if you should die explaining how the things that they complain about,
"Are things they could be changing, who do you think's gonna care?"

There were other lonely singers in a world turned deaf and blind,
Who were crucified for what they tried to show.
And their voices have been scattered by the swirling winds of time.
'Cos the truth remains that no-one wants to know.

Well, the old man was a stranger, but I'd heard his song before,
Back when failure had me locked out on the wrong side of the door.
When no-one stood behind me but my shadow on the floor,
And lonesome was more than a state of mind.

You see, the devil haunts a hungry man,
If you don't wanna join him, you got to beat him.
I ain't saying I beat the devil, but I drank his beer for nothing.
Then I stole his song.

And you still can hear me singing to the people who don't listen,
To the things that I am saying, praying someone's gonna hear.
And I guess I'll die explaining how the things that they complain about,
Are things they could be changing, hoping someone's gonna care.

I was born a lonely singer, and I'm bound to die the same,
But I've got to feed the hunger in my soul.
And if I never have a nickle, I won't ever die ashamed.
'Cos I don't believe that no-one wants to know.

feito

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