Streets Of Laredo
(专辑: Very Early Joan - 1982)
As I
walked out on the
streets of Laredo. As I
walked out on Laredo one day, I
spied a
poor cowboy wrapped in white linen, Wrapped in white linen as cold as the
clay. "I can see by your outfit that you are a
cowboy." These words he did say as I
boldly walked by. "Come an' sit down beside me an' hear my sad story. "I'm shot in the
breast an' I
know I
must die." "It was once in the
saddle, I
used to go dashing. "Once in the
saddle, I
used to go gay. "First to the
card-house and then down to Rose's. "But I'm shot in the
breast and I'm dying today." "Get six jolly cowboys to carry my coffin. "Six dance-hall maidens to bear up my pall. "Throw bunches of roses all over my coffin. "Roses to deaden the
clods as they fall." "Then beat the
drum slowly, play the
Fife lowly. "Play the
dead march as you carry me along. "Take me to the
green valley, lay the
sod o'er me, "I'm a
young cowboy and I
know I've done wrong." "Then go write a
letter to my grey-haired mother, "An' tell her the
cowboy that she loved has gone. "But please not one word of the
man who had killed me. "Don't mention his name and his name will pass on." When thus he had spoken, the
hot sun was setting. The
streets of Laredo grew cold as the
clay. We took the
young cowboy down to the
green valley, And there stands his marker, we made, to this day. We beat the
drum slowly and played the
Fife lowly, Played the
dead march as we carried him along. Down in the
green valley, laid the
sod o'er him. He was a
young cowboy and he said he'd done wrong.