(Peter Cooper/Todd Snider) Well Known Music/SESAC and 
Nobody's Collecting On These Songs/BMI admin. by BUG Music
Todd and I wrote this after having numerous discussions about the night Bob Dylan called his folk-singing contemporary Phil Ochs “a journalist” and then threw Phil out of his car. That’s the sort of thing we have numerous discussions about over on my side of town. The story is in the song. To our way of thinking, Dylan and Ochs probably both wished everything had played out differently. “If he ever thought better, he thought too late,” is the way we wrote it. We never said who “he” was, because we didn’t have to. My heart goes out to Dylan, wherever he is tonight. And to Phil Ochs, lying in that cold, cold ground.
Poor Phil Ochs 
  Sad and low 
  Hands   in his pockets
  Wonderin’ where to go 
  Thrown from the   limo 
  For speaking his mind
  Like a red-eyed photo
  Into a garbage can
  At the corner of Hero and   Also-Ran
  A fragile heart skipped a fragile   beat
  It’s warm in the limousine
  Cold on the streets of 
Thin, wild mercury
  And gold lame
  Where things will go your way
  Or they won’t
  Thin wild mercury
  And gold lame
  You know what they say
  Or you don’t 
It was all over some new Dylan   song
  That Phil had the nerve to say sounded   wrong
  Dylan stopped the car
  Words shook like a fist
  Phil you’re not a writer, you’re a   journalist
  Phil you’re not a writer, you’re a   journalist
  Death of a rebel in a twist of   fate
  If he ever thought better, he thought too   late
  Poor Phil Ochs, he slipped through the   cracks
  Judas went electric and he never looked   back on 
Thin wild mercury
  Or gold lame
  Where things will go your way
  Or they won’t
  Thin wild mercury
  And gold lame 
  You know what they say
  Or you don’t
  No, you don’t
  No, you don’t