Lyrics What It Was, Was Football - Andy Griffith
It
was
back
last
October,
I
believe
it
was.
We
was
going
to
hold
a
tent
service
off
at
this
college
town,
and
we
got
there
about
dinner
time
on
Saturday.
Different
ones
of
us
thought
that
we
ought
to
get
us
amouthful
to
eat
before
we
set
up
the
tent.
So
we
got
off
the
truck
and
followed
this
little
bunch
of
peoplethrough
this
small
little
bitty
patch
of
woods
there,
And
we
came
up
on
a
big
sign
that
says,
"Get
something
to
Eat
Here."
I
went
up
and
got
me
two
hot
dogs
and
a
big
orange
drink,
And
before
I
could
take
a
mouthful
of
that
food,
This
whole
raft
of
people
come
up
around
me
and
got
meto
where
I
couldn't
eat
nothing,
Up
like,
and
I
dropped
my
big
orange
drink.
Well,
friends,
they
commenced
to
move,
and
there
wasn't
so
much
that
I
could
do
but
move
with
them.
Well,
we
commenced
to
go
throught
all
kinds
of
doors
and
gates
and
I
don't
know
what-
all,
And
I
looked
up
over
one
of
'em
and
it
says,
"North
Gate."
We
kept
on
a-going
through
there,
and
pretty
soon
wecome
up
on
a
young
boy
and
he
says,
"Ticket,
please."
And
I
says,
"Friend,
I
don't
have
a
ticket;
I
don't
even
know
where
it
is
that
I'm
a-going!"
Well,
he
says,
"Come
on
out
as
quick
as
you
can."
And
I
says,
"i'll
do
'er;
i'll
turn
right
around
the
first
chance
I
get."
Well,
we
kept
on
a-moving
through
there,
and
pretty
soon
everybody
got
where
it
was
that
they
was
a-going,
Because
they
parted
and
I
could
see
pretty
good.
And
what
I
seen
was
this
whole
raft
of
people
a-sittin'
on
these
two
banksand
a-lookin
At
one
another
across
this
pretty
little
green
cow
pasture.
Somebody
had
took
and
drawed
white
lines
all
over
it
anddrove
posts
in
it,
And
I
don't
know
what
all,
And
I
looked
down
there
and
I
seen
five
or
six
convicts
arunning
up
and
downand
a-blowing
whistles.
And
then
I
looked
down
there
and
I
seen
these
pretty
girlswearin'
these
little
bitty
short
dressesand
a-dancing
around,
And
so
I
thought
I'd
sit
down
and
see
what
it
was
that
was
a-going
to
happen.
About
the
time
I
got
set
down
good
I
looked
down
there
and
I
seen
thirty
or
forty
men
come
a-runnin'
out
of
one
end
of
a
great
big
out
house
down
there
and
everybody
Where
I
was
a-settin'
got
up
and
hollered!
And
I
asked
this
fella
that
was
a
sittin'
beside
of
me,
"Friend,
what
is
it
that
they're
a-hollerin'
for?"
Well,
he
whopped
me
on
the
back
and
he
says,
"Buddy,
have
a
drink!"
I
says,"Well,
I
believe
I
will
have
another
big
orange."
I
got
it
and
set
back
down.
When
I
got
there
again
I
seen
that
the
men
had
got
in
two
little
bitty
bunches
down
there
real
close
together,
and
they
voted.
They
elected
one
man
apiece,
and
them
two
men
come
out
in
the
middle
of
that
cow
pastureand
shook
hands
Like
they
hadn't
seen
one
another
in
a
long
time.
Then
a
convict
came
over
to
where
they
was
a-standin',
And
he
took
out
a
quarter
and
they
commenced
to
oddman
right
there!
After
a
while
I
seen
what
it
was
they
was
odd-manning
for
It
was
that
both
bunchesfull
of
them
wanted
this
funnylookin
little
pumpkin
to
play
with.
And
I
know,
friends,
that
they
couldn't
eat
it
Because
they
kicked
it
the
whole
evenin'and
it
never
busted.
Both
bunchesful
wanted
that
thing.
One
bunch
got
it
and
it
made
the
other
bunch
just
as
madas
they
could
be!
Friends,
I
seen
that
evenin'
the
awfulest
fight
that
I
everhave
seen
in
all
my
life!
They
would
run
at
one
-another
and
kick
one-
another
and
throw
one
another
down
And
stomp
on
one
another
and
grind
their
feet
in
one
another
and
I
don't
know
what-all
and
just
as
fast
as
one
of
'em
would
get
hurt,
They'd
take
him
off
and
run
another
one
on!
Well,
they
done
that
as
long
as
I
set
there,
But
pretty
soon
this
boy
that
had
said
"Ticket,
please."
He
come
up
to
me
and
said,
"Friend,
you're
gonna
have
to
leave
because
it
is
that
you
don't
have
a
ticket."
And
I
says,
"Well,
all
right."
And
I
got
up
and
left.
I
don't
know
friends,
to
this
day,
what
it
was
that
they
was
a
doin'
down
there,
but
I
have
studied
about
it.
I
think
it
was
that
it's
some
kindly
of
a
contest
where
they
see
Which
bunchful
of
them
men
can
take
that
pumpkin
and
run
from
one
end
of
that
cow
pasture
To
the
other
without
gettin'
knocked
down
or
steppin'
in
somethin'.
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