Only a Pawn in Their Game Lyrics
A finger fired the trigger to his name.
A handle hit out in the dark
A hand set the spark
Two eyes took the aim
Behind a man's brain
But he can't be blamed
He's only a pawn in their game.
'You got more than the blacks, don't complain.
You're better than them, you been born with white skin,' they explain.
And the Negro's name
Is used it is plain
For the politician's gain
As he rises to fame
And the poor white remains
On the caboose of the train
But it ain't him to blame
He's only a pawn in their game.
And the marshals and cops get the same,
But the poor white man's used in the hands of them all like a tool.
He's taught in his school
From the start by the rule
That the laws are with him
To protect his white skin
To keep up his hate
So he never thinks straight
'Bout the shape that he's in
But it ain't him to blame
He's only a pawn in their game.
And the hoof beats pound in his brain.
And he's taught how to walk in a pack
Shoot in the back
With his fist in a clinch
To hang and to lynch
To hide 'neath the hood
To kill with no pain
Like a dog on a chain
He ain't got no name
But it ain't him to blame
He's only a pawn in their game.
They lowered him down as a king.
But when the shadowy sun set on the one
That fired the gun
He'll see by his grave
On the stone that remains
Carved next to his name
His epitaph plain:
Only a pawn in their game.

This song is great, and shows how the government uses everybody as pawns in order for themselves to gain. The poor white man thinks he is better off, but in reality its only the authority that prospers. It's a lose-lose situation for everybody not in power.
This is an inaccurate interpretation of what Dylan is saying. See sp12342 post below.
This is an inaccurate interpretation of what Dylan is saying. See sp12342 post below.
@MrMojoRisin5552 On the other hand:
@MrMojoRisin5552 On the other hand:
Yes, it's true that poor whites were a pawn in a larger game.
Yes, it's true that poor whites were a pawn in a larger game.
But were they only pawns?
But were they only pawns?
Was it pre-ordained that the would hate and kill? Did they not ultimately have personal responsibility for their actions?
Was it pre-ordained that the would hate and kill? Did they not ultimately have personal responsibility for their actions?
While the song lays bare the manipulation and social conditioning of the Old South, I've always felt there was at least a touch of irony in the repeated invocation of "only a pawn in their game".
While the song lays bare the manipulation and social conditioning of the Old South, I've always felt there was at least a touch of irony in the repeated invocation of "only a pawn in their game".

Without talking about Medgar Evers, the KKK, I'll talk about this song! The song is really about all the pain and hatred people felt towards Byron Beckwith, the a**hole who killed him. People wanted to rip his head off! BUT Dylan was saying, Byron was just a pawn in the middle of something bigger. Dylan was trying to say... look... the politicians and governors and sheriffs all get paid to deal with the outcry of upset citizens over things like higher taxes and unemployment, but as long as they can blame somebody else for our problems (ie: in this case, the blacks), people will never put their hatred towards the places where it belongs, authority, and authority escapes cleanly and continues to hurt us. It prevents authority from doing their job, they aren't held accountable. Dylan talks about how people are taught to shot and hate and blame others for their problems, as long as they don't blame the person whose teaching them their ways, for they may be the "real" problem for what they don't have.

one of my favorite songs on one of my favorite albums. Medgar Evars was the president of the NAACP when he was assasinated. It was only a few hours before a pawn pulled the trigger on Medgar Evars that President Kennedy delivered an Anti-Racism speech. In that speech, Kennedy Preached that how can our country be a country of freedom and equality if its freedom and equality for everyone, except for the blacks. It's amazing, isn't it? How easy it is, to be selfish, to be evil, to be lazy, to support hatred, to be ignorant. It's much too easy.
It's so easy to laugh It's so easy to hate It takes strength to be gentle and kind
It's so easy to laugh It's so easy to hate It takes strength to be gentle and kind

The song refers to the murder of Medgar Evers, who was the Mississippi leader of the NAACP. He was killed by a poor white man. I kknow the song is about a spefic story but it makes me think of solders as pawns in the game of LIFE played by the worlds leaders.

This song contains some of the most brilliant social commentary I've ever heard. Everyone loses from racism, be they African-American, White, Asian-American or Latino...that is, everyone but the elites who control the power structure of this country. Racism is a tool used to divide workers and perpetuate the exploitative domination of the ruling class. Props to you, Bob Dylan.

read ghosts of mississippi. then you'll get a better idea of who medgar evers was. its a lot better than the movie.

this song is really sad, it seems from the point of view of the assasinator that he is just trying to better his life, and killing medgar evers is justified by the politicians. because the naacp is detrimental to the south politicans. Medgar becomes a martyr and the killer is forgotten and no one wins in the end.

Robert Zimmerman was born under a fast star, Mercury, and if u find the black & white video of this song, He tells the upset & scorned crowd that as he sees it, in three verses, the murderer was a poor white man, and a pawn in the game of wealthy and manipulative groups who use and need individuals to perform & provide for their needs, wants, and labor agenda. a pawn is often used to distract and delay and destroy organisation of labor groups and consensual togetherness of laborers as this may lead to revolution; The Turning of the Wheel, Zimmerman reveals true guts and agility delivering this song, at such a young age, before a large crowd of angry & upset individuals , and sings this song which neither side really wants to hear, for it Rings with boldness, applause as he quietly scedaddles offstage. That is a big apple under the name Dylan.

Only a pawn. Forever a pawn. They can kiss that shit goodbye.

The phrase "only a pawn in their game" is not saying that the poor white man is only a pawn in the government's larger scheme, as is often reflected in the above posts. It's a sarcastic comment on a documentary that the John Birch society put out in the 60's, saying that the civil rights movement and black justice were only a covert attempt to promote Communism in America. The documentary portrays the black movement as a socialist mentality to use 'equal rights' to implant communism as a substitute for the 'democratic freedom' of consumerist 'me-first' america. Thus, in the first verse for example, Dylan is NOT saying that the assassin is not to blame, rather, he is saying it in a sarcastic tone: "oh no, the assisin is not to blame, he is only a pawn in the larger game using the blacks to get a communist goverment." Dylan even says in the last line that Evers himself was a pawn in the game of the movement - to bring pity to the civil rights movement, and in doing so, the communist movement underneath it. Dylan's lyrics do not point to who is behind the movement to communism, whether the blacks themselves, or the government itself (although in verse two he says that the Negro's name is used it is plain For the politician's gain). He only points out, sarcastically, that the "poor white man" is suffering the blows of this movement to take away his rights. All the white, poor or not, benefited from the powerful hand of politics during that time. Dylan never thought that the white man was 'poor' or unfortunate, as is also noted in his song Oxford Town. His line "But the poor white man's used in the hands of them all like a tool" is sarcastic comment on how the politicians are trying to instill a larger movement under which even the 'poor' white man becomes a pawn. He becomes more forthcoming in his lines: "the laws are with him To protect his white skin To keep up his hate..." Even the poor white man becomes rich in hatred. Dylan spoke on several occasions about the John Birch Society, sarcastically, as is examplified in "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues".
"The phrase "only a pawn in their game" is not saying that the poor white man is only a pawn in the government's larger scheme, as is often reflected in the above posts."
"The phrase "only a pawn in their game" is not saying that the poor white man is only a pawn in the government's larger scheme, as is often reflected in the above posts."
No, that is exactly what it is about. You're deeply misinterpreting and, in some cases, simply misunderstanding the lyrics. For example, in the closing lines of the song, you somehow read into the lyrics that Dylan is describing Medgar Evers as a pawn, but that is not the case. Evers is lowered into his grave as a king, it is "the one who...
No, that is exactly what it is about. You're deeply misinterpreting and, in some cases, simply misunderstanding the lyrics. For example, in the closing lines of the song, you somehow read into the lyrics that Dylan is describing Medgar Evers as a pawn, but that is not the case. Evers is lowered into his grave as a king, it is "the one who fired the gun" whose epitaph reads: "Only a pawn in their game."
You further misinterpret his lyrics when you suggest that Dylan means "unfortunate" when he describes the white man as poor. This is not the case, when Dylan describes "the poor white man," he means poor in the most literal sense of the word: having little or no money.
Finally, you mention the following lyrics, but leave out the line which completes the point:
He's taught in his school From the start by the rule That the laws are with him To protect his white skin To keep up his hate [b]So he never thinks straight 'Bout the shape that he's in But it ain't him to blame He's only a pawn in their game.[/b]
What these lyrics - and the song as a whole - mean, is that the poor (as in destitute, not unfortunate) white man is taught to viciously defend his position on the lowest rung of the mythical ladder of opportunity from the black man, so that he'll be distracted from looking up the ladder and focusing his attention on those who are actually responsible for his problems.
This is an argument that predates Dylan at least as far back as the end of the 19th century, as is reflected in this 1892 quote by Thomas E. Watson:
“You are kept apart that you may be separately fleeced of your earnings. You are made to hate each other because upon that hatred is rested the keystone of the arch of financial despotism which enslaves you both. You are deceived and blinded that you may not see how this race antagonism perpetuates a monetary system which beggars both.”
Aaron3ous is correct. Dylan's analysis wasn't particularly new in academia - it was the Marxist standpoint for a very long time (rich people use racial divisions to distort class conflict), but this was pretty original in terms of putting this sentiment in art. I think fewer academics subscribe to this theory now, though. Newer works look at the ways in which white workers themselves inscribed meaning in their whiteness.
Aaron3ous is correct. Dylan's analysis wasn't particularly new in academia - it was the Marxist standpoint for a very long time (rich people use racial divisions to distort class conflict), but this was pretty original in terms of putting this sentiment in art. I think fewer academics subscribe to this theory now, though. Newer works look at the ways in which white workers themselves inscribed meaning in their whiteness.
In the context of the summer of 1963, it was very important to put this statement out there by the New Left.
In the context of the summer of 1963, it was very important to put this statement out there by the New Left.