C F C
He had a blue wing tattooed on his shoulder
C F
Well it might have been a blue bird I don't
G
know
C F
But he'd get stone drunk and talk about
C
Alaska
C F C
The salmon boats and 45 below
C F
He said he got that blue wing up in Walla
C
Walla
C F G
And his cellmate there was Little Willy John
C F C
And Willy he was once a great blues singer
C F C
And Wing and Willy wrote 'em up a song. They said...
[Chorus]
C F
It's dark in here; can't see the sky
C
But I look at this blue wing and I close my
G
eyes
C F
And I fly away beyond these walls
C
Up above the clouds where the rain don't
G
fall
C
On a poor man's dream
C F C
They paroled Blue Wing in August, of 1963
C F G
He moved north picking apples to the town of
Wenatchee
C F C
Then winter finally caught him in a run down
trailer park
C F C
On the south side of Seattle where the days
grow gray and dark
C F
And he drank and he dreamt of visions when
C
the salmon still ran free
C F G
And his fathers' fathers crossed that wild
old Bering Sea
C F
And the land belonged to everyone and there
C
were old songs yet to sing
C F
Now it's narrowed down to a cheap hotel and
C
a tattooed prison wing
[Chorus]
C F C
Well he drank his way to la, and that's
where he died
C F
And no one knew his Christian name and there
G
was no one there to cry
C F C
But I dreamt there was a funeral, a preacher
and a cheap pine box
C F C
And half way through the service, Blue Wing began to talk. He said...
[Otro]
G C
Hey hey, On a poor man's dream
G C
Hey hey, On a poor man's dream