I had worked on my own for awhile As a man who cleaned each crooked mile But I quit when my heart became vile; When my eyes took each passing load Then I lived like a dog for a time On a leash of my own meager rhyme With the whip and lash of each selfish crime Hear me whimper on down the road I swear I'll never know the things you've known Or the gifts that to me you've bestowed See the man who, dragging cigarettes, assumes That the girl sitting way across the room Holds no curse: A foolish thought to presume; A thoughtless act to stare So he'll leave with no sign, no gesture But a sigh, as he grips to his vesture; As he grips to that most nostalgic semester Of a time more or less impaired I swear I'll be nobody's wreck to repair But a tool for each soul in despair By the crossing of Concord and Main Where the church and stone steeple remain There I walked, and tore my fate in twain; There I died, and there I rise