( dedicated to many of the earliest female pioneers during the Alaska-Yukon Gold Rush--1896-1900)
ankle length petticoats and whale bone corsettes both clothing and symbol of the supposed weaker sex denied an education and a decent wage i saw how it withered my mother and i refused to grow old that way
my family called me lazy and a foolish child i never let their phrases phase me out where the living was wild i set out to make some gravy
as a single lady out staking a claim i got laughed at , pushed over, and shoved down the lane so i weighed my options--got me a crib on "the line" and let those fellows call me 'baby' as long as they could pay me fine
i felt like i was crazy the klondike too wild my calculating eye turned hazy out where the living was wild i hoped my stamina could save me
dame fortune soon shone down on me in the shape of diamond tooth lil and georgia lee those 4th street parties and all the energy they took we replenished ourselves telling stories the ones that'd never make the books
diamond tooth lil, she saved georgia' s hide when like so many other demimondes , she was crushed by some guy gave her one sharp piece of advice as she wept 'don't make him glad you were something he got rid of, make him wish you were something he'd kept' a single piece of wisdom it was a pearl from a slightly jaded golden dreamer out where the living was wild both cursed and loved the rush that freed her
georgia lee, she went to invest money well with the wisdom that she'd gained from blanche cascaden and mrs. belle soon she had some places and she taught me how to double my money and branch out beyond the title of a good time girl
my family called me lazy and a foolish child i never let their phrases phase me out where the living was wild i made me a tone of gravy
now i don't mean to suggest it was an easy float to the top i worked hard for almost every nugget i got and when i speak of loss i mean i lost a lot when i speak of loss i lost a lot