Bobby Bare - The Day The Saw Mill Closed Down lyrics

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Bobby Bare - The Day The Saw Mill Closed Down lyrics

Her house on the corner of Cedar and Elm Still stands in our town But it's been empty since she moved away The day that the saw mill closed down. We'd sit on her porch almost every night I remember how happy we were We'd grow up and marry I'd work at the mill To make a living for her. Her father worked at the mill Like most of the others in town I lost my girl when he lost his job The day that the saw mill closed down. She moved from the corner of Cedar and Elm And I never saw her again But I can still hear her mother's soft voice Saying honey it's time to come in. No longer do mill hands live here The giant saws don't make a sound No longer does my love live here Not since the saw mill closed down. She left when the saw mill closed down... [Narrative by Bobby spoken after song:] (Where the gentle summer breezes blow.) I've lived in Kansas City all of my life and I guess you could say I've done pretty well 'cause we lived in a modern well insulated house in the suburbs With storm windows central heat and air-conditionin' We got plenty of privacy the neighbors don't bother us and we don't bother them but you take that air-conditioner for instance That's a wonderful invention and I wouldn't take anything for it But you know sometimes I get to thinkin' I'd just like to open all of the windows and holler at somebody Or feel the honest-to-goodness breeze again or even hear a train whistle Or hear those two girls in Newport Arkansas singin' You Are My Sunshine When I was a kid I used to visit my grandparents every summer in Newport And Newport's a little town down on the White River And they lived in the sorta yellow frame house down close to the levee And they got awful hot there during the day But at night the breeze was blowing from the river and it sure felt good I slept right next to the window and on some nights when the air was just right I could hear sounds driftin' in from all parts of that little town Like the train pullin' into the depot ever night and always the chorus of crickets but crickets that's a sound you don't even hear after you get used to it but it's pleasant sorta like background music But the sound I remember most was You Are My Sunshine I don't know exactly where it came from but I think it must have been the house Beyond the vacant lot on the other corner But almost every night I would hear those two girl singin' And they sure could sing pretty They sang other songs but that's the one I remember most And I've often wondered who they were and whatever happened to 'em I think they must have been very pretty and had black hair.