Song for Ernie Abbot
Song for Ernie Abbot
by Don Franks
Maybe you might know the building,
Wellington’s trades hall
Not the flashest place in
town, it's dingy old and small
Where unions keep ticking
over, from year to weary year
They seldom make
sensations, but thank god, they’re still here
Union
people help the working folks in many different
ways
Without their efforts we’d have even colder darker
days
The end of one grey autumn day, near time to
shut the door
Ernie took a one last look around the foyer
floor
“Some silly bugger’s left his bag, I’ll stow
it” Ernie said
He grabbed the little handle and a union
man was dead
Now they never caught the bastard who
booby trapped our place
All we do know it was somebody
afraid to show their face
Who didn’t front like Ernie,
and happen how it may
He wore it for the rest of us still
in the hall that day
Now thirty years later, the old
building still remains
It seems easier to count the
knocks than tally up the gains
But unions keep ticking
over, from year to weary year
They seldom make
sensations, but thank god they’re still here.
'cos
union people help the working folks in many different
ways
Without their efforts we’d have even colder darker
days