[Verse 1]
Well I come from the rural Midwest
It's the land I love more than all the rest
It's the place I know and understand
Like a false-front building, like the back of my hand
[Verse 2]
And the men I knew when I was coming up
Were sober as coffee in a Styrofoam cup
There were Earls and Rays, Harlans and Roys
They were full-grown men, they were barbed wire boys
[Verse 3]
They raised grain and cattle on the treeless fields
Sat at the head of the table and prayed before meals
Prayed an Our Father and that was enough
You pray more than that and you couldn't stay tough
[Verse 4]
Tough as the busted thumbnails on the weathered hands
They worked the gold plate off their wedding bands
And they never complained, no they never made noise
And they never left home, these barbed wire boys
[Bridge]
'Cause their wildest dreams were all fenced in
By the weight of family, by the feeling of sin
That'll prick your skin at the slightest touch
If you reach too far, if you feel too much
[Verse 5]
So their deepest hopes were never expressed
Just beat like bird's wings in the cage of their chest
All the restless longings, all the secret joys
That never were set free in the barbed wire boys
[Verse 6]
And now one by one they're departing this earth
And it's clear to me now exactly what they're worth
Oh they were just like Atlas holding up the sky
You never heard him speak, you never saw him cry
[Verse 7]
But where do the tears go that you never shed?
Where do the words go that you never said?
Well there's a blink of the eye, there's a catch in the voice
That is the unsung song of the barbed wire boys
Barbed Wire Boys was written by Susan Werner.