Mother Country
(专辑: California Bloodlines - 1969)
There was a
story in the
San Francisco Chronicle that of course I
forgot to save But it was about a
lady who lived in the
'good old days' When a
century was born and a
century had died And about these 'good old days' the
old lady replied "Why they were just a
lot of people doing the
best they could" "Just a
lot of people doing the
best they could" And then the
lady said that they did it, "pretty up and walking good" What ever happened to those faces in the
old photographs I
mean, the
little boys……. Boys? . . . . .
Hell they were men Who stood knee deep in the
Johnstown mud In the
time of that terrible flood And they listened to the
water, that awful noise And then they put away the
dreams that belonged to little boys And the
sun is going down for Mister Bouie As he's singing with his class of nineteen-two Oh, mother country, I
do love you Oh, mother country, I
do love you I
knew a
man named E.A.Stuart, spelled S.T.U.A.R.T. And he owned some of the
finest horses that I
think I've ever seen And he had one favorite, a
champion, the
old Campaigner And he called her "Sweetheart On Parade" And she was easily the
finest horse that the
good Lord ever made But old E.A.Stuart, he was going blind And he said "Before I
go, I
gotta drive her one more time" So people came from miles around, and they stood around the
ring No one said a
word You know, no one said a
thing Then here they come, E.A. Stuart in the
wagon right behind Sitting straight and proud and he's driving her stone blind And would you look at her Oh, she never looked finer or went better than today It's E.A. Stuart and the
old Campaigner, "Sweetheart On Parade" And the
people cheered Why I
even saw a
grown man break right down and cry And you know it was just a
little while later that old E.A. Stuart died And the
sun it is going down for Mister Bouie As he's singing with his class of nineteen-two Oh mother country, I
do love you Oh mother country, I
do love you