The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #4803   Message #1430484
Posted By: GUEST,MCP
09-Mar-05 - 08:39 AM
Thread Name: Lyr Req: Joe Peel (Peter Bond)
Subject: Lyr Add: JOE PEEL (Peter Bond)
There have been a few other threads on this but none with the right words. Raggy's come close, but there are a few errors there too. Here's what Peter sang, with changes from Raggy's version in bold.

Mick



JOE PEEL
(Peter Bond)

Workington way, when lads left school
Just the pit and foundry beckoned.
Young Joe went down to hew the coal
But not for long, so some folks reckoned.
For Joe could tackle hard and Joe could run,
He only needed time for growing,
And soon he'd signed his name to play
And to the city moved away.

Now on the sports page he'd appear,
The idol of the local lasses.
Out on the field he played it fair,
While all the girls made forward passes.
Until another match turned all the heads -
Jarrow lads V ruling classes,
And with no future in it now
It's home again and underground.

Back underground to hear no lark,
Thirty years from dawn till evening,
Until the coal had left its mark
And to the bank the earth returned him.
No more to sweat his days out in the dark,
Some years on top the dust had earned him,
And all the while the sickness grew
Still he'd ask what he could do for you.

He'd do odd jobs for one and all,
Though snow was thick or rain was teeming,
And all the world would seem to call,
The kettle never finished steaming.
"Reach up!", he'd say, "By God you're looking thin",
While mischief in his eyes was gleaming,
"If Lizzie thinks you're hungry still
There'll be nowt for us in her will".

The day you left I stayed outside,
With scalding tears, no comfort knowing.
We all turned up to say goodbye,
The church was filled to overflowing
You'd never've believed it if you'd seen
How many people mourned your going
And just how lucky folks still feel
To say they knew Joe Peel.

You'd never have believed it if you'd seen
How many people mourned your going
And just how lucky folks still feel
To say they knew Joe Peel.


Source: Peter Bond LP: It's all right for some

(Few possible mishearings: beckoned/reckoned might be beckon/reckonand the sickness might be his sickness, but I think the above is right)

The sleeve notes say: "Joe was a miner and ex-Rugby League player from Flimby in West Cumberland. Silicosis forced him to give up work in the pit to work above ground but he never stopped doing things for people. The kindest man I've met - everyone knew Joe and everyone liked him"