Highway Patrolman

Album: Nebraska (1982)
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  • My name is Joe Roberts, I work for the state
    I'm a sergeant out of Perrineville, barracks number eight
    I always done an honest job, as honest as I could
    I got a brother named Franky, and Franky ain't no good

    Now ever since we was young kids, it's been the same come down
    I get a call on the shortwave, Franky's in trouble downtown
    Well if it was any other man, I'd put him straight away
    But when it's your brother sometimes you look the other way

    Yeah, me and Franky laughin' and drinkin', nothin' feels better than blood on blood
    Takin' turns dancin' with Maria as the band played "Night of the Johnstown Flood"
    I catch him when he's strayin', like any brother would
    Man turns his back on his family, well, he just ain't no good

    Well, Franky went in the army back in nineteen sixty-five
    I got a farm deferment, settled down, took Maria for my wife
    But them wheat prices kept on droppin' 'til it was like we were gettin' robbed
    Franky came home in sixty-eight and me I took this job

    Yeah, we're laughin' and drinkin', nothin' feels better than blood on blood
    Takin' turns dancin' with Maria as the band played "Night of the Johnstown Flood"
    I catch him when he's strayin', teach him how to walk that line
    Man turns his back on his family, he ain't no friend of mine

    Well, the night was like any other, I got a call 'bout quarter to nine
    There was trouble in a roadhouse out on the Michigan line
    There was a kid lyin' on the floor lookin' bad, bleedin' hard from his head
    Was a girl cryin' at a table and it was Frank, they said

    Well, I went out and I jumped in my car and I hit the lights
    Well, I musta done a hundred and ten through Michigan County that night
    It was out at the crossroads, down 'round Willow bank
    Seen a Buick with Ohio plates, behind the wheel was Frank

    Well I chased him through them county roads
    'Til a sign said "Canadian border five miles from here"
    I pulled over the side of the highway and watched his taillights disappear

    Me and Franky laughin' and drinkin', nothin' feels better than blood on blood
    Takin' turns dancin' with Maria as the band played "Night of the Johnstown Flood"
    I catch him when he's strayin' like any brother would
    Man turns his back on his family, he just ain't no good Writer/s: Bruce Springsteen
    Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 14

  • Bear from CanadaI interpret the song 100% different than everyone else. The key is the last line of the chorus. "Man turns his back on his family, well, he just ain't no good" Well, the person that does that is the highway patrolman. Imagine the song from Franky's point of view. Serves his country, not the one year that he had to if he was drafted, but THREE years in the thick of the Vietnam war. That's a volunteer. He has every right to expect to come home a hero, but what does he find? His brother lost the farm, took the woman he loved and has a job that Franky is arguably more qualified for. Joe uses his authority to "catch him strayin" every chance he gets. Joe "I always done an honest job, as honest as I could" certainly implies to me that he is not as honest as he should be. And how does the song end? Joe literally chases him out of the country over a bar fight!! Joe "took" Maria, as the song says and I feel that is at the heart of the relationship between the bothers. And in that context you get the feeling Joe is happy to watch Franky's taillights disappear. "Man turns his back on his family, well, he just ain't no good". That's the last line.

    In the broader context of the album it is on, it is one more song telling the story of the anti-hero.
  • Barry from Sauquoit, Ny'Dancin' with Maria as the band played Night of the Johnstown Flood…
    On May 31st 1889* the South Fork Dam collapsed flooding the city of Johnstown, Pennsylvania...
    * Per Wikipedia...
  • Craig from Peterborough, OnRoberto for all I know your comment was left years ago, but you sir are a great example of why Americans get duped into all kinds of nonsense by the sheer force of propaganda. And if you are going to call Bruce a "liberal America hater" while hero worshiping Johnny Cash, then you might want to listen to the lyrics of "Man in Black", "Custer", "The Ballad of Ira Hayes" for starters. Johnny Cash and Bruce Springsteen are both true legends and 20th century poets. I was listening to this song driving towards Manitoba in North Dakota and just after it finished I passed a sign saying "U.S. Border Patrol Stn 5 miles"
  • Michael from Vellmar, GermanyIf you listen carefully to the recording you can even hear the chair he is sitting on during the recording.
  • J. E. Starkweather from Lincoln, NeThe lyrics are haunting. Like others have already pointed out "Highway Patrolman" was written and performed first by Springsteen
  • Henry O. Godwinn from Wheeling, WvThe Indian Runner, directed by Sean Penn, used the song as a plot. Also a tv movie called Joe Roberts was made but didn't do well.
  • Omri617 from Tel Aviv, IsraelJohnny Cash even said once : "I give Bruce the credit for writing that song. I wish i had written it" - in an interview with Steve Turner, England 1988/ Source : The Man Called Cash - Steve Turner/Kriss Kristofferson
  • Ben from Mission Viejo, CaMy family knows many people in the music industry, most particularly Johhny Cash. We don't know him personally, but we know a lot about Springsteen. He actually recorded Nebraska while living in my hometown. Johnny was a talented, kind, but troubled person. It was good that he found peace later in life. Bruce is the real deal. You may not agree with his politics, but he does NOT hate America. He just has a problem with those who mislead and lie to Americans. A true American allows one to have their opinions without questioning their patriotism.
  • Roberto from Vermont, United StatesJohnny Cash played the heck out of Highway Patrolman. He owns the song despite the fact that the liberal American hater Bruce Springsteen wrote it.

    God Bless America & God Bless Johnny Cash
  • Ben from Nottingham, EnglandYep, i agree with the comments below about this being done by Springsteen first. I am a massive fan of both and can confirm that Bruce did it first. Cash covered many songs in his life and this was one of them. Its hardly suprising that Cash covered this and 'Johnny 99' because the whole 'Nebraska' album is based on the type of themes that Cash sang about through his whole career. In fact, Bruce has said that he listened to Cash's music all day long in the period when he wrote and recorded 'Nebraska'.
  • Steve from Woodbridge, VaAs a huge fan of both Bruce and Cash, I can confirm that Bruce wrote this one. It's the only song I can think of which served as the basis for a feature length film .
  • Bruce from Warnsveld, NetherlandsThis is one of the most beautiful songs ever written. The video-clip though, is a bit strange
  • Johnny from Sault Ste. Marie, CanadaSorry but this song was written by Bruce, not Johnny Cash. However, Johnny did do a great version of Bruce's "Johnny 99".
  • A from Loch Arbour, NjThis song was originally written and recorded by Johnny Cash
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