Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
Judy Collins
The last line is changed to echo the year in which it is sung.
Written by Shel Silverstein, the song documents points in the timeline of the struggle for equal rights.
Hey Nelly Nelly, come to the window
Hey Nelly Nelly look at what I see
He's riding into town on a sway backed mule
Got a tall black hat and he looks like a fool
Sure is talking like he's been to school
And it's 1853
Hey Nelly Nelly, listen what he's saying
Hey Nelly Nelly, he says it's getting late
And he says them black folks should all be free
To walk around the same as you and me
And he's talking about a thing he calls democracy
And it's 1858
Hey Nelly Nelly, hear the band a-playing
Hey Nelly Nelly, hand me down my gun
'Cause the men are cheering and the boys are too
They're putting on their coats of blue
And I can't sit around here and talk to you
'Cause it's 1861
Hey Nelly Nelly, now the fighting's over
Hey Nelly Nelly, I've come back alive
My coat of blue is stained with red
And the man in the tall black hat is dead
But we sure will remember all the things he said
In 1865
Hey Nelly Nelly, come to the window
Hey Nelly Nelly, look at what I see
I see white folks and colored walking side by side
Walking in a column that's a century wide
It's still a long and a hard and a bloody ride
In 1963
Hey, Nelly Nelly was written by Jim Friedman & Shel Silverstein.
Hey, Nelly Nelly was produced by Jac Holzman & Mark Abramson.