|
Willie Moore was a king, his age twenty-one, |
|
He courted a damsel fair; |
|
O, her eyes was as bright as the diamonds every night, |
|
And wavy black was her hair. |
|
He courted her both night and day, |
|
'Til to marry they did agree; |
|
But when he came to get her parents consent, |
|
They said it could never be. |
|
She threw herself in Willie Moore's arms, |
|
As oftime had done before; |
|
But little did he think when they parted that night, |
|
Sweet Anna he would see no more. |
|
It was about the tenth of May, |
|
The time I remember well; |
|
That very same night, her body disappeared |
|
In a way no tongue could tell. |
|
Sweet Annie was loved both far and near, |
|
Had friends most all around; |
|
And in a little brook before the cottage door, |
|
The body of sweet Anna was found. |
|
She was taken by her weeping friends, |
|
And carried to her parent's room, |
|
And there she was dressed in a gown of snowy white, |
|
And laid her in a lonely tomb. |
|
Her parents now are left all alone, |
|
One mourns while the other one weeps; |
|
And in a grassy mound before the cottage door, |
|
The body of sweet Anna still sleeps. |
|
[Willie Moore never spoke that anyone heard, |
|
And at length from his friends did part, |
|
And the last heard from him, he'd gone to Montreal, |
|
Where he died of a broken heart.] |
|
This song was composed in the flowery West |
|
By a man you may never have seen; |
|
O, I'll tell you his name, but it is not in full |