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Waitin' For a Train
Jimmie Rodgers Lyrics


Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴  Line by Line Meaning ↴

All around the water tanks
Waiting for a train
A thousand miles away from home
Sleeping in the rain
I walked up to a brakeman
To give him a line of talk
He says if you've got money
I'll see that you don't walk
I haven't got a nickel
Not a penny can I show
Get off, get off, you railroad bum
He slammed the boxcar door
He put me off in Texas
A state I dearly love
The wide open spaces all around me
The moon and the stars up above
Nobody seems to want me
Or lend me a helping hand
I'm on my way from â€~Frisco
I'm going back to Dixieland
Oh, my pocketbook is empty
And my heart is full of pain
I'm a thousand miles away from home
Just waiting for a train

Overall Meaning

The lyrics to Jimmie Rodgers’ song “Waitin’ For a Train” paint a picture of a man who is far from home, with no money to his name, and riding the rails looking for work. The first verse set the scene: “All around the water tanks, waiting for a train, a thousand miles away from home, sleeping in the rain…” The man is stuck in the middle of nowhere, taking refuge against a water tank in search of a train that might take him closer to his destination.


In the second verse, the man approaches a brakeman, hoping to get some help. But the brakeman tells him that if he has no money, he can’t help him: “He says if you've got money, I'll see that you don't walk. I haven't got a nickel, not a penny to my name...” The brakeman then orders him off the train and slams the boxcar door in his face. Left standing on the platform in Texas, the man expresses his love for the state – with all its wide open spaces and the moon and the stars above - but his feelings are mixed with a sense of desolation, with “Nobody seem[ing] to want me, or lend me a helping hand…”


The final verse leaves the listener with a sense of despair and longing. The man’s pocketbook is empty, and his heart is full of pain, with “a thousand miles away from home” and “just waiting for a train”. All he has is his hope that he’ll get to his destination, which he refers to as “Dixieland”. The lyrics in “Waitin’ For a Train” show the harsh realities of life during the Great Depression, when thousands of men roamed the country looking for work, trapped in McJob labor markets, and relying on trains to take them to their next assignment.


Line by Line Meaning

All around the water tanks
Individuals are present near the water tanks


Waiting for a train
Waiting for a rail vehicle to arrive


A thousand miles away from home
A long distance from their residence


Sleeping in the rain
Resting in inclement weather


I walked up to a brakeman
Approaching a railway switchman


To give him a line of talk
To converse with him


He says if you've got money
The brakeman stated, if you have funds


I'll see that you don't walk
I will ensure that you do not have to walk


I haven't got a nickel
I do not possess any currency


Not a penny can I show
I have no money to display


Get off, get off, you railroad bum
Depart, depart, you wanderer of the railways


He slammed the boxcar door
He forcefully shut the boxcar door


He put me off in Texas
He expelled me in Texas


A state I dearly love
A location I passionately adore


The wide open spaces all around me
Surroundings with unobstructed expanses


The moon and the stars up above
The celestial bodies in the sky


Nobody seems to want me
No one desires my presence


Or lend me a helping hand
Or offer assistance


I'm on my way from 'Frisco
I'm travelling away from San Francisco


I'm going back to Dixieland
I'm returning to the Southern United States


Oh, my pocketbook is empty
Oh, my wallet contains no money


And my heart is full of pain
My chest is filled with agony


I'm a thousand miles away from home
I'm separated from my abode by a great distance


Just waiting for a train
Merely anticipating the arrival of a train




Writer(s): Jimmie Rodgers

Contributed by Muhammad Y. Suggest a correction in the comments below.
To comment on or correct specific content, highlight it

Comments from YouTube:

@cindysherf8818

This is the father of country music plain and simple

@christopheranderson601

Hello Cindy, How are you doing?

@Tob1Kadach1

Disputed by some but I do agree, he may not of founded country but he was it's 1st star

@lmt7864

I can see my Dad sitting at the table singing along with Jimmy Rodger particularly Waiting for a Train, it’s something that has stayed with me. I just love it. What an incredible talent Jimmy was. So many memories of my Dad who was so full of emotion and love he played all the old country artists music but Jimmy was his favourite.

@holleefielder4100

Oh what a precious memory of your Daddy. I miss mine so much, too. My Daddy would sing Hank Williams Sr. I thought he was singing about my Momma....and it made me sad for him and mad at Momma for treating him so mean.

@adalbertotrevor6461

@@holleefielder4100 hi there!

@jerlan23

I almost can't hear this without crying for my Dad. He was one of the millions of men who rode the freight trains looking for work during the Great Depression. Many a time he was far from home, starving, and broken hearted. He once ate magpie eggs to survive. This could be a biography of him during that time. Thank you, Jimmie Rodgers. And thank you, psteve, for posting.

@tommyo8967

Gandy dancers

@Themaintrain

I'm from Meridian, MS. I noticed none of the comments mention the Jimmie Rogders Memorial Festival they hold in the spring each year. I've seen almost everyone in country music playing there. I've seen Willie, Waylon, Hank Jr, Conway, and all the greats! They come to pay tribute to the Father of Country Music!

@Lance-Stroll

0 voice lessons. 0 sound effects. 100% talent

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