The Ballad of Ira Hayes
Written by Peter LaFarge
Recorded by Johnny Cash
 
Call him drunken Ira Hayes,
He won't answer any more.
Not the whiskey drinking Indian
Or the Marine that went to war.
 
Gather around me, people,
There's a story I would tell.
About a brave young Indian
You should remember well.
 
From the land of the Pima Indians,
A proud and noble band,
Who farmed the Phoenix Valley
In Arizona land.
 
Down the ditches for a thousand years,
The waters grew Ira's people's crops.
Til the white man stole their water rights,
And the sparkling water stopped.
 
Now, Ira's folks were hungry,
And their land grew crops of weeds.
When war came, Ira volunteered,
And forgot the white man's greed.
 
There they battled up Iwo Jima hill,
Two hundred and fifty men.
But only twenty-seven lived
To walk back down again.
 
And when the fight was over,
And Old Glory raised,
Among the men who held it high
Was the Indian, Ira Hayes.
 
Ira Hayes returned a hero,
Celebrated through the land.
He was wined and speeched and honored.
Everybody shook his hand.
 
But he was just a Pima Indian,
No water, no home, no chance.
At home, nobody cared what Ira'd done.
And when did the Indians dance?
 
Then Ira started drinking hard,
Jail was often his home.
They let him raise the flag and lower it
Like you'd throw a dog a bone.
 
He died drunk, early one morning,
Alone in the land he'd fought to save.
Two inches of water in a lonely ditch,
Was a grave for Ira Hayes.
 
 
 
 
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