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Come all you old-time cowboys and listen to my song-- |
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Please do not grow weary, I'll not detain you long-- |
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Concerning some wild cowboys who did agree to go |
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And the spend the summer pleasant on the range of the buffalo. |
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Well, I found myself in Griffin in 1883, |
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When a well-known famous drover come walkin' up to me. |
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He said, "How do you do, young feller, |
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And how'd you like to go |
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And spend the summer pleasant on the trail of the buffalo?" |
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Well, me bein' out of work right then, to that drover I did say, |
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"This goin' out on the buffalo road depends upon your pay. |
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If you'll pay good wages, transportation to and fro, |
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Well, I think I might go with you on the range of the buffalo." |
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"Yes, I will pay good wages and transportation, too, |
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If you'll agree to work for me until the season's through; |
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But if you do grow homesick and try to run away, |
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You'll starve to death out on the trail and you'll also lose your pay." |
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Well, with all this flatterin' talkin', well, he signed up quite a train, |
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Some ten or twelve in number, all able-bodied men. |
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Our trip it was a pleasant one as we hit the westward road |
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Until we struck old Boggy Creek in old New Mexico. |
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Well, here our pleasures ended, and our troubles all begun, |
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When a lightin' storm hit us and it made the cattle run. |
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We got all full of stickers from the cactus that did grow, |
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And the outlaws waitin' to pick us off in old New Mexico. |
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Well, our workin' season ended, but that drover would not pay; |
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He said, "You went and drunk too much, you're all in debt to me." |
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But the cowboys never had heard of such a thing as a bankrupt law, |
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So we left that drover's bones to bleach on the range of the buffalo. |