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by
Sampson Pittman
recording of October 16. 1938, Detroit, Michigan
from
The Devil Is Busy (Laurie 7002)
(Spoken: Boys, aint no need to try and tell me nothing. You cant tell me nothing bout the circle because [?] the circle cause I worked for every contractor up and down the line. And I know just exactly what theyll do and how to [?]. Thats why you hear me say: I aint no stranger, you cant tell me nothing. I been down there lots of times.)
I worked on the levee
, long time ago,
there aint nothing bout the levee camp, boy, that I dont know
Partner, partner, partner, dont you think I know
Son, I aint no stranger, been down in the circle before
Now, there aint but the one contractor that I fear, God willing,
George Mullin they dont allow him back here
Partner, partner, partner, dont you think I know
Son, I aint no stranger, I been down in the circle before
Now, theres Mr. Forrest Jones and hes so long and tall,
he killed a merchant man and hed love to kill us all
Partner, partner, partner, dont you think I know
Son, I aint no stranger, I been down in the circle before
(Spoken: Play it one time, play it)
Now, Mr. Charlie Loran, hes the mercy-man, the best contractor,
partner, thats up and down the line
Partner, partner, partner, dont you think I know
Well, I aint no stranger, I been down in the circle before
Now, when you leave, Id [take ?] by Highway 44,
the first camp you get to, it is called Rainy More
Partner, partner, partner, dont you think I know
Said, I aint no stranger, I been down in the circle before
I aint gonna shed sorrow, I aint gonna break down,
drinking while Im wheeling, getting mean, all [?]
Partner, partner, partner, dont you think I know
Son, I aint no stranger, I been down in the circle before
Now, our friend in Arkansas, tell him what to do,
they done told him to come to Arkansas, I told him no, no, no
Partner, partner, partner, dont you think I know
Son, I aint no stranger, I been down in Arkansas before
(Spoken: Goodbye)
__________
Note 1: origin: from the old French word levée, act of raising, from lever to raise. An embankment for preventing flooding, or a river landing place, also, a continuous dike or ridge (as of earth) for confining the irrigation areas of land to be flooded. A levee camp therefore is a work camp for building or improving dikes to prevent rivers from flooding the land, primarily in the
Mississippi Delta
area.