Let Him Roll Composer(s): Guy Clark First release by: Guy Clark - 1975
Well, he was wino, tried and true Done about everything there is to do He worked on freighters, an' he'd worked in bars He worked on farms, an' he'd worked on cars
It was white port that put that look in his eye Grown men get when they need to cry We sat down on the curb to rest And his head just fell down on his chest
He says: "Every single day it gets "Just a little bit harder to handle and yet ..." Then he lost the thread and his mind got cluttered And the words just rolled off down the gutter
Well, he was elevator man in a cheap hotel In exchange for the rent on a one room cell An' he's old: years beyond his time No thanks to the world, and the white port wine
So he said: "Son" He always called me son Said: "Life for you has just begun" An' then he told me the story I'd heard before How he fell in love with a Dallas whore
Now, he could cut through the years to the very night When it ended in a whore house fight And she turned his last proposal down In favor of being a girl about town
Now it's been seventeen years, right in line He ain't been straight in none of the time It's too many days of fightin' the weather An' too many nights of not being together So he died
An' when they went through his personal effects In among the stubs from the welfare checks Was a crumblin' picture of a girl in a door An' an address in Dallas, and nothin' more
An' the welfare people provided the priest A couple from the mission down the street Sang "Amazing Grace", and no one cried 'Cept some lady in black, way off to the side
We all left and she's standing there A black veil covering her silver hair Ol' One-Eyed John said her name was Alice An' she used to be a whore in Dallas
So let him roar, Lord, let him roll I bet he's gone to Dallas, rest his soul Just you let him roll, Lord, let him roar He always said that heaven Was just a Dallas whore
Just you let him roar, Lord, let him roll I bet he's gone to Dallas, rest his soul
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