The Old Christholm Trail
Freesheet Music The Old Christholm Trail A-Major
Freesheet Music The Old Christholm Trail Bb-Major
Freesheet Music The Old Christholm Trail C-Major
Freesheet Music The Old Christholm Trail D-Major
Freesheet Music The Old Christholm Trail E-Major
Freesheet Music The Old Christholm Trail F-Major
Freesheet Music The Old Christholm Trail G-Major
Sheetmusic Bass Clef - The Old Christholm Trail -C-Major>>>
Sheetmusic Bass Clef - The Old Christholm Trail -Bb-Major>>>
Sheetmusic Bass Clef - The Old Christholm Trail -A-Major>>>
Sheetmusic Bass Clef - The Old Christholm Trail -Ab-Major>>>
Sheetmusic Bass Clef - The Old Christholm Trail -G-Major>>>
Sheetmusic Bass Clef - The Old Christholm Trail -F-Major>>>
Come along, boys, and listen to my tale,
I'll tell you of my troubles on the Old Chizzum Trail.
Coma-ti yi yippy, yippy yea, yippy yea,
Coma-ti yi yippy, yippy yea.
I was born in Texas in the year '89,
I can ride anything this side the state line.
Went down to San Antone and went to workin' cattle,
And here come t&e sheep men and we had a battle.
There ain't no better territory in the United States,
But she shore is hotter than hell's own gates.
It's I an' Bill Jones was good old cronies,
We was always together on our sore-backed ponies.
We left Nelson Ranch on June twenty-third,
With a drove of Texas cattle, two thousand in the herd.
We whooped them through Gonzales, night was drawin' nigh
We bedded them down on a hill close by.
Foot in the stirrup, my seat in the saddle,
Best little cowboy that ever rode a-straddle.
Slicker in the wagon and pouring down hail,
Goin' round the herd with a dogie by the tail.
It's rainin' like hell and it's gittin' mighty cold,
And the long-horned sons-a-guns are gittin' mighty hard to hold.
Saddle up boys, and saddle up well,
For I think these cattle have scattered to hell.
Me and old Blue Dog arrived on the spot,
And we put them to milling like the boiling of a pot.
I'm on my best horse and I am goin' on a run,
I'm the quickest-shootin' cowboy that ever pulled a gun.
I flushed them left, couldn't get 'em to stop, .
I can run as long as an eight-day clock.
My seat in the saddle and I gave a little shout
The lead cattle broke an' the herd went about.
My quirt in my hand, my slicker on my saddle,
I hung and rattled with them goddam cattle.
Some of 'em we captured without half tryin',
They was so damned scared they didn't need hog-tyin'.
We strung 'em out next mornin', and the boss made a count
And he said, "Boys, we are just a few out."
"Make a circle, boys, and don't lose no time,
I am sure they will be easy to find."
It was over the hillside and over the draws,
And we soon brought in the old Two Bars
It's bacon and beans 'most every day
I'd as soon been eatin' prairie hay.
I hit my little pony and he give a little rack,
And damned big luck if we ever get back.
I hit my little pony and he give a little rack,
And damned big luck if we ever get back.
I'm headed south just whoopin' and a-yellin',
If I don't find a steer, I'll take a heifer yearling.
Jumped in the saddle and hit him with my quirt,
The hind cinch busted and the saddle hit the dirt.
With my blankets and my gun and a rawhide rope,
I'm a-slidin' down the trail in a long keen lope.
I'll chew my tobacco and I'll squirt my juice,
I'm goin' down to town to see the old Blue Goose.
I went to the bar and struck on a bell,
Here comes a bunch of niggers running like hell.
Pulled out my gun, brought it on the level,
And them damn niggers run like the devil.
And they got me by the foreleg and put me in jail,
And I couldn't find a damn soul to go my bail.
Boss come around with a whip in his hand
And he swore, by God, I wasn't worth a damn.
I sold my horse and I sold my saddle,
You can go to hell with your longhorn cattle.
I'm goin' back home, I'm not jokin' or lyin',
I'm goin' back home, just a-yellin' and a-flyin'.
I hunted up the boss to draw my roll,
He figgered me out eight dollars in the hole.
I'm goin' downtown to get a little dope
'Cause my back's all broke from the draggin' of the rope.
Jumped on the train and gave such a yell,
The goose-back broke and the train went to hell.
When I thought of my gal I nearly would cry,
I'll quit herding cows in the sweet by and by.
I hadn't been at home but some days two or three
When I put off my gal for to see.
"If you've made up your mind to quit the cowboy life,
I have fully decided to be your little wife."
Farewell, old paint, I wish you no harm,
I've done quit the business to go on the farm.
No more a cow-puncher to sleep at my ease,
'Mid the crawlin' of the lice and the bitin' of the fleas.
Woke up one mornin' on the old Chizzum Trail
With my pecker in my hand and a cow by the tail
(alt. cho:)
Come and tie my pecker to a tree, to a tree
Come and tie my pecker to a tree.
Stray in the herd, and the boss says "Kill it"
So I shot it in the ass with the handle of a skillet.
First time I seed her she was floatin' down stream
With her ass blowin' bubbles and her pussy flowin' cream
Fucked her standin' and I fucked her lyin'
If she's had wings I'd of fucked her flyin'.
Last time I seed her, and I ain't seed her since
She was jackin' off a bull through a barbed wire fence.
Jumped in the saddle, and the saddle wasn't there
So I sunk eight inches in the old gray mare.
My seat's in the saddle and my saddle's in the sky
I'll quit punchin' cows in the sweet by and by.
The Manchester Rambler
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PDF Freesheet Music The Manchester Rambler G-Major
I'm a rambler, I'm a rambler from Manchester way
I get all my pleasure the hard moorland way
I may be a wage slave on Monday
But I am a free man on Sunday
I've been o'er the Snowdon, I've slept upon Crowden
I've camped by the Wain Stones as well
I've sunbaked on Kinder, been burnt to a cinder
And many more things I can tell
My rucksack has oft been my pillow
The heather has oft been my bed
And sooner than part from the mountains
I think I would rather be dead
The day was just ending as I was descending
By Grindsbrook, just by Upper Tor
When a voice cried, Eh you, in the way keepers do
He'd the worst face that ever I saw
The things that he said were unpleasant
In the teeth of his fury I said
Sooner than part from the mountains
I think I would rather be dead
He called me a louse and said, Think of the grouse
Well I thought but I still couldn't see
Why old Kinder Scout and the moors round about
Couldn't take both the poor grouse and me
He said, All this land is my master's
At that I stood shaking my head
No man has the right to all mountains
Any more than the deep ocean bed
I once loved a maid, a spot-welder by trade
She was fair as the rowan in bloom
And the blue of her eye matched the June moorland sky
And I wooed her from April to June
On the day that we should have been married
I went for a ramble instead
For sooner than part from the mountains
I think I would rather be dead
So I walk where I will over mountain and hill
And I lie where the bracken is deep
I belong to the mountains, the clear-running fountains
Where the grey rocks rise rugged and steep
I've seen the white hare in the gulley
And the curlew fly high over head
And sooner than part from the mountains
I think I would rather be dead
The Leaving of Liverpool
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Sheetmusic Bass Clef - Leaving Liverpool - F-Major>>>
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Sheetmusic Bass Clef - Leaving Liverpool - D-Major>>>
Sheetmusic Bass Clef - Leaving Liverpool - C-Major>>>
I am bound for California by way of stormy Cape Horn And I will write to thee a letter, love, when I am homeward bound I've shipped on a Yankee clipper ship, "Davy Crockett" is her name And Burgess is the captain of her and they say that she's a floating hell I have sailed with Burgess once before, I think I know him well If a man's a sailor he will get along, if not then he's sure in hell Farewell to Lower Frederick Street, Anson Terrace and Park Lane I am bound away for to leave you and I'll never see you again
The Irish Rover
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Noten Bassschlüssel - The Irish Rover - C-Major>>>
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Noten Bassschlüssel - The Irish Rover - Eb-Major>>>
Noten Bassschlüssel - The Irish Rover - F-Major>>>
On the fourth of July eighteen hundred and six
We set sail from the sweet cove of Cork
We were sailing away with a cargo of bricks
For the grand city hall in New York
'Twas a wonderful craft, she was rigged fore-and-aft
And oh, how the wild winds drove her.
She'd got several blasts, she'd twenty-seven masts
And we called her the Irish Rover.
We had one million bales of the best Sligo rags
We had two million barrels of stones
We had three million sides of old blind horses hides,
We had four million barrels of bones.
We had five million hogs, we had six million dogs,
Seven million barrels of porter.
We had eight million bails of old nanny goats' tails,
In the hold of the Irish Rover.
There was awl Mickey Coote who played hard on his flute
When the ladies lined up for his set
He was tootin' with skill for each sparkling quadrille
Though the dancers were fluther'd and bet
With his sparse witty talk he was cock of the walk
As he rolled the dames under and over
They all knew at a glance when he took up his stance
And he sailed in the Irish Rover
There was Barney McGee from the banks of the Lee,
There was Hogan from County Tyrone
There was Jimmy McGurk who was scarred stiff of work
And a man from Westmeath called Malone
There was Slugger O'Toole who was drunk as a rule
And fighting Bill Tracey from Dover
And your man Mick McCann from the banks of the Bann
Was the skipper of the Irish Rover
We had sailed seven years when the measles broke out
And the ship lost it's way in a fog.
And that whale of the crew was reduced down to two,
Just meself and the captain's old dog.
Then the ship struck a rock, oh Lord what a shock
The bulkhead was turned right over
Turned nine times around, and the poor dog was drowned
I'm the last of the Irish Rover
The Fields of Athenry
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PDF freesheet music The Fields of Athenry F-Major
PDF freesheet music The Fields of Athenry G-Major
By a lonely prison wall
I heard a young girl calling
"Michael they are taking you away
For you stole Travellyn´s corn
so that the young might see the morn´
Now the prison ship lies waiting in the bay"
Low lie the fields of Athenry
Where once we watched
the small free birds fly
Our love was on the wing
we had dreams and songs to sing
It´s so lonely ´round the fields of Athenry
By a lonely prison wall
I heard a young man calling
"Nothing matters, Mary,
when you´re free
Against the famine and the Crown
I rebelled, they ran me down
Now you must raise our child with dignity"
Low lie the fields of Athenry
Where once we watched
the small free birds fly
Our love was on the wing
we had dreams and songs to sing
It´s so lonely ´round the fields of Athenry
By a lonely harbour wall
she watched the last star falling
While the prison ship
sailed out against the sky
Sure she wait and hope and pray
for her love in Botany Bay
It´s so lonely round the fields of Athenry