On the Rim of the World
Notes: words and music by
Malvina Reynolds; copyright 1973 Schroder Music Company, renewed
2001.She inches along on the rim of the world,
Always about to go over,
How she can manage I never will know,
To get from one day to the other.
Scrounging a buck or a bed
Or the share of a roof for her head,
This nobody's child, this precarious girl,
Who lives on the rim of the world.
She looks like a princess in somebody's rags,
She dreams of a world without danger,
Climbing the stairs to a room of her own
With someone who isn't a stranger.
But now she eats what she can,
And accepts what there is for a man,
This nobody's child, this precarious girl,
Who lives on the rim of the world.
She inches along on the rim of the world,
Always about to go over,
How she can manage I never will know,
To get from one day to the other.
Scrounging a buck or a bed
Or the share of a roof for her head,
This nobody's child, this precarious girl,
Who lives on the rim of the world.
Malvina Reynolds songbook(s) in which the music to this song appears:---- The Malvina Reynolds Songbook
Malvina Reynolds recording(s) on which this song is performed:
---- Held Over---- Ear to the Ground
Recordings by other artists on which this song is performed:
---- Rosalie Sorrels: Be Careful There's a Baby in the House (Green Linnet Records GLCD 2100, 1991)
---- Rosalie Sorrels: No Closing Chord; The Songs of Malvina Reynolds (Red House Records RHR CD 143, 2000)
---- Jane Voss and Hoyle Osborne: Pullin' Through (Green Linnet SIF 1044, 1983)
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http://people.wku.edu/charles.smith/MALVINA/mr126.htm
This page copyright 2006 by Charles H. Smith and Nancy Schimmel. All rights reserved.
This page copyright 2006 by Charles H. Smith and Nancy Schimmel. All rights reserved.
… she,
Clara this week, maybe Clarissa or Claire next week, or after the next bust,
thought for a moment, for just a moment, no more, she had no time for much
more, what with her name, her birth name, Clementine, Clementine Barrows, place
of birth Northbridge, Kentucky down in the hills and hollows
of Appalachia, some nineteen years ago, coming up next on the court docket. What
was it for this time, solicitation, no, lewd and lascivious behavior, whatever
that was. She just tried to please the
guy, when she, like always with the guys, approached him looking for a drink, or
drinks, and asked him what he was looking for, and if it was her, give him what
he asked for, or maybe what he needed, what he wanted in the back of the Red Top
Grille. How did she know he would have buyer’s remorse, or whatever he told the
cops, to get out from under his own rap and walk, respectable john walk, when
somebody complained and yelled copper after they had finished. She thought though,
that minute thought, that she was due for a break, a break from having to pay attention
to any man who would give her a look, from any guy who thought he could go
around the world on the basis of a few cheap scotches (not even good stuff,
Haig &Haig maybe, stuff that a lady should expect of a
gentleman and that she had developed a taste for), some fast talk and some fast
hands.
She
could hardly believe that it was only a couple of years before that she had
headed west, headed for Los Angeles. Headed out to be a Hollywood star
(everybody back home had said that she had the looks to make it, back in Northbridge
and around the hills and hollows after she won that Miss Eastern Kentucky beauty
contest, the
Jessica Lange looks , Jessica Lange who just then
was making a big splash with a monkey, uh, oh a gorilla, who was all goggle
eyes over her in the re-make of King Kong ) or at least a starlet, on that
Trailways she picked up in Prestonsburg after that incident with her father,
his drunken midnight creep up the stairs one night which she could not understand , and then that big blow-up with Lem, Lemuel Bass, when he asked her to marry him. Christ she was only seventeen, only
finishing high school, only starting out with her dreams. She would probably
have had two kids and one in the oven by now if she had stayed.
Yah, she
had no regrets about leaving that scene as hard as things had been once she got
out here and found that fistfuls, bushels full, hell, acres full of other young girls from Steubenville, from Decatur, from Moline, from Fargo (all the
Dakota cities it seemed like) were looking to be stars, or at least starlets.
Once she learned the ropes, knew the score, she got that job as a drive-in
waitress, a car hop, until that night manager (really just
a trainee night manager) thought that putting her on the side of the drive-in
where all the valley guys sat their cars down on Friday and Saturday night to
feast of burgers and fries delivered by a short shirt and halter tip-worthy young waitress meant that he could roam his hands
all over her, Then, after he fired her, that foolish job (as she country girl, country high Baptist
girl brought-up before her mother died, still blushed
an innocent blush thinking about it) so-called, modeling, well not
really modeling but showing herself naked, in the buff, for guys to look over at private
parties. She just couldn’t do it after that
first time,
couldn’t have a bunch of strangers, strange men, eyeing her
and thinking whorish thoughts. Then nothing, no jobs, no money, finally no
room, and tough times even keeping herself fed, nothing for a month or so. The streets.
Desperate,
forget blushes (except private look back country girl properly Christian
brought up blushes), forget man stares, forget everything except trying to get off
the streets after she had nearly been molested, raped, one night when she slept out on the edges of Venice Beach and a couple of
guys had held her down before some guy called them off and they ran. Then a few days later she met Trudy on the Santa Monica beach as she was trying to get a little sun to make her look less like
some midnight troll, Trixie from Norman, Oklahoma who had taken her own
Trailways ride west a couple of years before her and knew the score, and knew
that she couldn’t go back to Norman. Trudy was, well she called herself a bar
maid but what she was a prostitute working the better bars in Santa Monica, the
ones near the pier.
And so
she, Clementine Barrows born, now Clara, learned the ropes, learned how to take
a man’s money without public blushes. Learned how make a man pay for his around
the world pleasures. It had been tough, like
now with this soft bust soon to be taken care of by Artie and then back to work, and some of these guys were a little wacky, wacky in their
sexual dreams, their quirky wants that she could
write a book about, but she had gotten herself a room before long, a room of her own, a nice room she was fixing up, got off those damn streets, and got used to what men
had to give, which wasn’t much.
…yah, as
her name was called to go before the judge she thought she needed a break,
needed it bad.
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