Sixteen tons is a song supposedly authored, in 1946, by the country songwriter and composer Merle Travis. It is exquisitely performed by the group The Platters.
This lament depicts the ordeal of American coal miners in the Appalachians. "Seize tonnes" is the title of the French version released by Eddy Mitchell.
Some people say man's made out mud,
Well, a good man's made out of muscle and blood
Muscle and blood, and skin and bones,
And mind that's weak and the back that's strong.
Refrain:
You load 16 tons,
And what do you get?
Another day older,
And deeper in debt.
Saint Peter, don't you call me,
Cause I can't go,
I owe my soul to the company store
I was born one morning when sun didn't shine,
I picked up my shovel and I went to the mine,
Loaded sixteen tons of number nine coal,
And the straw boss said: "Well, bless my soul!"
Refrain
If you see me coming, you better step aside,
A lot of men didn't and a lot of men died.
My one fist is iron, the other one's steel,
And if the left don't getcha, then the right one will
Refrain
I was born one morning, it was drizzling rain,
Fighting and Trouble 's my middle name,
I was raised down the Canebrake by an old mountain mine,
And there ain't no hard hearted women make me walk that line!