Harry Chapin - Dogtown video free download


29,103
Duration: 07:25
Uploaded: 2011/07/12

"Up in Massachusetts There's a little spit of land.

The men who make the maps, yes, they call the place Cape Ann.

The men who do the fishing call it Gloucester Harbor Sound,

But the women left behind, they call the place Dogtown.

The men go out for whaling, past the breakers and the fogs.

The women stay home waiting they're protected by the dogs.

A tough old whaler woman who had seen three husbands drown,

Polled the population and she named the place Dogtown.

There's all these grey faced women in their black widow's gowns,

Living in this grave yard granite town.

Yeah, you soon learn there's many more than one way to drown;

That's while going to the dogs here in Dogtown.

And she speaks: My father was a merchant all in the Boston fief.

When my husband came and asked him for my hand.

But little did I know then that a Gloucester whaler's wife

Marries but the sea salt and the sand.

He took me up to Dogtown the day I was a bride.

We had ten days together before he left my side.

He's the first mate of a whaling ship,

the keeper of the log.

He said, "Farewell, my darling, I'm going to leave you with my dog."

And I have seen the splintered timbers of a hundred shattered hulls,

Known the silence of the granite and the screeching of the gulls,

I've heard that crazy widow Cather walk the harbor as she raves

At the endless rolling whisper of the waves.

Sitting by the fireside, the embers slowly die.

Is it a sign of weakness when a woman wants to cry?

The dog is closely watching the fire glints in his eye.

No use to go to sleep this early, no use to even try.

My blood beats like a woman's,

I've got a woman's breast and thighs.

But where am I to offer them

to the ocean or the skies?

Living with this silent dog

all the moments of my life,

He has been my only husband;

am I a widow, or his wife?

Yes, it's a Dogtown and it's a fog town,

And there's nothing around 'cept the sea pounding granite ground

And this black midnight horror of a hound.

I'm standing on this craggy cliff,

my eyes fixed on the sea.

Six months past, when his ship was due,

I'm a widow to be.

For liking this half living with the lonely and the fog,

You need the bastard of the mating of a woman and a dog.

And I have seen the splintered timbers of a hundred shattered hulls,

Known the silence of the granite and the screeching of the gulls,

I've heard that crazy widow Cather walk the harbor as she raves

At the endless rolling whisper of the waves.

At the endless rolling whisper of the waves.

At the endless rolling whisper of the waves."

/Lyrics from The Harry Chapin Archive at Harrychapin.com\

Comments

8 years ago

Evelyn McCord

I saw him in concert in 76 at Vassar College. Got to be on stage with him and talk to him backstage. A gentle, warm man. One of my best childhood memories.

9 years ago

Barry Doucette

Miss Harry a lot. Met him a couple of times and he shows never disappointed and he walked the walk as far as his commitment to charity. He wrote some amazing stories and I was devastated when he was killed, I had tickets to see him at the Club Casino in Hampton beach the next night... My favorite song... "Mr. Tanner" although " A Better Place to Be' is great as well.

10 years ago

Ronan FitzGerald

so tired of the silly folk song comments about H, cause all the know are Flowers or Taxi or Little Boy.. he was / is so much more.. Corey, Tanner, Better, Annie, Titanic, Rock, and on and on...

10 years ago

cajunlover1000

Dirty Dirty ladies!!!!

10 years ago

Piggy-Pike-Music-Like

I saw Harry Play this song LIVE..at Avery Fischer Hall in NYC..and I was blown away sine it was NOT part of his usual set..that was the only time I ever heard him play it live and I have never found any video of the song...I was told there is one klnown video of the song from a concert in Long Island...but ...where is it...

10 years ago

Ryan P

one of the best songs i've ever heard in my life.

10 years ago

Diane Raguso

I just saw a show about gloucester. On the edge of the harbor somebody put up a nice statue of glousester women waiting for the ships to arrive. I didn't see any dogs! lol

11 years ago

David F. Gonzalez

What a great storyteller and great song.

11 years ago

Michael Durnan

This song, Sniper and Bummer are Harry's best, I think.

12 years ago

mdparrots

Sorry, that's Gloucester...

12 years ago

mdparrots

Harry Chapin seemed to write a lot of dark, depressing ballads. This is one of his darkest. I don't know whether he was a student of nautical history, but he sure nailed this one! I cannot find a history of Glouster Harbor.

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