Julie catch a rabbit by his hair
Come back steppin' like to walk on air
Get back home where you belong
And don't you run off no more

Don't hang your head, let the two time roll
Grass shack nailed to a pine wood floor
Ask the time baby I don't know
Come back later, gonna let it show

I say row Jimmy row, gonna get there, I don't know
Seems a common way to go, get out and row, row, row, row, row
Here's a half dollar if you dare
Double twist when you hit the air
Look at Julie down below
The levee doin' the do-pas-o

I say row Jimmy row, gonna get there, I don't know
Seems a common way to go, get out and row, row, row, row, row
Broken heart don't feel so bad
You ain't got half of what you thought you had
Rock you baby to and fro
Not too fast and not too slow

I say row Jimmy row, gonna get there, I don't know,
Seems a common way to go, get out and row, row, row, row, row.
That's the way it's been in town,
Ever since they tore the jukebox down
Two bit piece don't buy no more
Not so much as it done before
I say row Jimmy row, gonna get there I don't know
Seems a common way to go, get out and row, row, row, row, row


Lyrics submitted by itsmyownmind

Row Jimmy Lyrics as written by Robert C. Hunter Jerome J. Garcia

Lyrics © BMG Rights Management, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

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Row Jimmy song meanings
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  • +1
    General Comment

    Just a fantastic song, one of my all time favorites. Beautiful image of a river town past its heyday, a girl dancing without a jukebox, working people struggling to get by, and finding solace in the healing power of music (which the song itself exemplifies). But who are Jimmy, Julie, and the narrator? I believe the narrator is Julie's mother speaking to her husband Jimmy. They are watching their daughter learning to dance while reflecting on their struggles and the plight of the town. They are struggling to get by, but marveling at their daughter coming of age. Julie's mother tells her husband to get down and row and see where life takes them.

    aristotelianon June 17, 2017   Link

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