| Song | A Month Of Sundays |
| Artist | Don Henley |
| Album | Building The Perfect Beast |
| Lyrics:Don Henley Music:Don Henley | |
| I used to work for Harvester | |
| I used to use my hand | |
| I used to make the tractors and the combines that plowed and harvested this great land | |
| Now I see my handiwork on the block everywhere I turn | |
| And I see the clouds 'cross the weathered faces and I watch the harvest burn | |
| I quit the plant in '57 | |
| Had some time for farmin' then | |
| Banks back then were lending money | |
| The banker was the farmer's friend | |
| And I've seen the dog days and dusty days | |
| Late spring snow and early fall sleet; | |
| I've held the leather reins in my hands and felt the soft ground under my feet | |
| Between the hot, dry weather and the taxes, and the Cold War it's been hard to make ends meet | |
| But I always put the shoes on our feet | |
| My grandson, he comes home from college | |
| He says, 'We get the government we deserve' | |
| My son-in-law just shakes his head and says, 'That little punk, he never had to serve' | |
| And I sit here in the suburbs and look out across these empty fields | |
| I sit here in earshot of the bypass and all night I listen to the rushin' of the wheels | |
| The big boys, they all got computers; got incorporated, too | |
| Me, I just know how to raise things | |
| That was all I ever knew | |
| Now, it all comes down to numbers | |
| Now, I'm glad that I have quit | |
| Folks these days just don't do nothin' | |
| Simply for the love of it | |
| I went into town on the Fourth of July | |
| Watched 'em parade past the Union Jack | |
| Watched 'um break out the brass and beat on the drum | |
| One step forward and two steps back | |
| And I saw a sign on Easy Street, said 'Be Prepared to Stop' | |
| Pray for the independent, little man | |
| I don't see next year's crop | |
| And I sit here on the back porch in the twilight | |
| And I hear the crickets hum | |
| I sit and watch the lightning in the distance but the showers never come | |
| I sit here and listen to the wind blow | |
| I sit here and rub my hands | |
| I sit here and listen to the clock strike, and I wonder if I'll see my companion again |
| Lyrics: Don Henley Music: Don Henley | |
| I used to work for Harvester | |
| I used to use my hand | |
| I used to make the tractors and the combines that plowed and harvested this great land | |
| Now I see my handiwork on the block everywhere I turn | |
| And I see the clouds ' cross the weathered faces and I watch the harvest burn | |
| I quit the plant in ' 57 | |
| Had some time for farmin' then | |
| Banks back then were lending money | |
| The banker was the farmer' s friend | |
| And I' ve seen the dog days and dusty days | |
| Late spring snow and early fall sleet | |
| I' ve held the leather reins in my hands and felt the soft ground under my feet | |
| Between the hot, dry weather and the taxes, and the Cold War it' s been hard to make ends meet | |
| But I always put the shoes on our feet | |
| My grandson, he comes home from college | |
| He says, ' We get the government we deserve' | |
| My soninlaw just shakes his head and says, ' That little punk, he never had to serve' | |
| And I sit here in the suburbs and look out across these empty fields | |
| I sit here in earshot of the bypass and all night I listen to the rushin' of the wheels | |
| The big boys, they all got computers got incorporated, too | |
| Me, I just know how to raise things | |
| That was all I ever knew | |
| Now, it all comes down to numbers | |
| Now, I' m glad that I have quit | |
| Folks these days just don' t do nothin' | |
| Simply for the love of it | |
| I went into town on the Fourth of July | |
| Watched ' em parade past the Union Jack | |
| Watched ' um break out the brass and beat on the drum | |
| One step forward and two steps back | |
| And I saw a sign on Easy Street, said ' Be Prepared to Stop' | |
| Pray for the independent, little man | |
| I don' t see next year' s crop | |
| And I sit here on the back porch in the twilight | |
| And I hear the crickets hum | |
| I sit and watch the lightning in the distance but the showers never come | |
| I sit here and listen to the wind blow | |
| I sit here and rub my hands | |
| I sit here and listen to the clock strike, and I wonder if I' ll see my companion again |