Vanzetti's Letter
(专辑: Ballads Of Sacco & Vanzetti - 1960)
The
year is nineteen twenty-seven, the
day is the
third day of May The
town is the
city called Boston, our address this dark Dedham jail To your Honor, the
Governor Fuller, to the
Council of Massachusetts State We, Bartolomeo Vanzetti and Nicola Sacco, do say Confined in your jail here at Dedham and under the
sentence of death We pray you exercise your powers to look at the
facts of our case We do not ask you for a
pardon, for a
pardon would admit of our guilt Since we are both innocent workers, we have no guilt to admit We are both born by parents in Italy, we cannot speak English too well Our friends of labor are writing these words here back of the
bars of our cell Our friends say if we speak too plain, sir, we may turn your feelings away And widen these canyons between us, but we risk our life to talk plain We think, sir, that each human being is in close touch with all of man's kind We think, sir, that each human being knows right from the
wrong in his mind We talk to you here as a
man, sir, even knowing our opinions divide We did not kill the
guards at South Braintree, nor dream of such a
terrible crime We call you eye to this fact, sir, we work with our hand and our brain These robberies, killings, were done, sir, by professional bandit men Sacco has been a
good cutter, Mrs. Sacco their money has saved And I, Vanzetti, I
could have saved money, but I
gave it as fast as received I'm a
dreamer, a
speaker, and a
writer, I
fight on the
working folks' side Sacco is Boston's fastest shoe trimmer, and he talks to the
husbands and wives We hunted your land, and we found it, hoped we'd find freedom of mind Build up your land, this Land of the
Free, this is what we came to find If we were those killers, Good Governor, we'd not be so dumb and so blind To pass out our handbills and make workers' speeches here by the
scene of the
crime Those fifteen thousands of dollars the
lawyers and judge say we took Do we, sir, dress up like two gentlemen with that much in our pocketbook? Our names are on that long list of radicals of the
Federal Government, sir They say that we needed watching as we peddled our literature Judge Thayer's mind was made this corridor to death, sir, like workers have walked before But we'll work in our working class struggle if we live a
thousand lives more