Commentary continues, with discussion of her being an ordained Holiness preacher, her investigations into the purported dangers of Bolshevism, and more examples of Holiness hypocrisy.
Molly discusses her trip to a (presumably) Bell Co. Holiness Church with Mary Barnicle, and the preacher misunderstanding her tears over her desire to commit ""cold-blooded murder"" on coal operators for prayerfulness. She then discusses the blessings of the Church: ""You get the first blessing when your sins is pardoned, and the second blessing you receive, you're baptized with the Holy Ghost and fire, and then it's impossible for you to commit a sin. Then, after that, why, you receive the gift of tongues and after that you receive that shaking power and the gift of dancing the holy dance and all these things and they get up and go to preaching, them Holiness preachers, and all at once, why, it's a mad house ??? the preacher he goes to shouting and screaming 'Hallelujah to Jesus, Hallelujah to God, Praise the Lord, Woooooo' and then everyone jumps up in the floor and goes to slappin his hands and a shoutin and a runnin grabbin women and men and all and a kissin and a lovin and a slobberin around on each other and I call 'em just simply sexual maniacs, nothing else.""
Recollection of dirty toasts given by her brother by way of his ""'memory lesson"" (recitation from memory) at school. Lomax misheard ""memory"" as ""'member,"" which AFS card reflects.
Recollection of singing ""little funny songs"" with other children, interspersed with various verses, among them some from ""Greasy String"" and ""Old Molly Hare.""
A discussion of her father dragging her from a Christmas Eve square dance at the Spivey family's house at the Queen City coal camp near East Bernstadt, Laurel Co. This is identified as ""Skip to My Lou"" on the AFS card as she recites a lyric that became the punch-line of the story.
Discussion of the dulcimers made by mixed-race luthier Dick Clark in Clay Co., and other instruments in the mountains: banjos, fiddles, mouth-bows, and Jews harps.
Jackson recites this song, one of the first blues she learned, saying it's too hard to sing. This side is erroneously identified on AFS card as second half of ""Roll On Buddy.""