Lyrics Streets of Laredo - Patti Page
As
I
walked
out
on
the
streets
of
Laredo.
As
I
walked
out
on
Laredo
one
day,
I
spied
a
poor
cowboy
wrapped
in
white
linen,
Wrapped
in
white
linen
as
cold
as
the
clay.
"I
can
see
by
your
outfit
that
you
are
a
cowboy."
These
words
he
did
say
as
I
boldly
walked
by.
"Come
an'
sit
down
beside
me
an'
hear
my
sad
story.
"I'm
shot
in
the
breast
an'
I
know
I
must
die."
"It
was
once
in
the
saddle,
I
used
to
go
dashing.
"Once
in
the
saddle,
I
used
to
go
gay.
"First
to
the
card-house
and
then
down
to
Rose's.
"But
I'm
shot
in
the
breast
and
I'm
dying
today."
"Get
six
jolly
cowboys
to
carry
my
coffin.
"Six
dance-hall
maidens
to
bear
up
my
pall.
"Throw
bunches
of
roses
all
over
my
coffin.
"Roses
to
deaden
the
clods
as
they
fall."
"Then
beat
the
drum
slowly,
play
the
Fife
lowly.
"Play
the
dead
march
as
you
carry
me
along.
"Take
me
to
the
green
valley,
lay
the
sod
o'er
me,
"I'm
a
young
cowboy
and
I
know
I've
done
wrong."
"Then
go
write
a
letter
to
my
grey-haired
mother,
"An'
tell
her
the
cowboy
that
she
loved
has
gone.
"But
please
not
one
word
of
the
man
who
had
killed
me.
"Don't
mention
his
name
and
his
name
will
pass
on."
When
thus
he
had
spoken,
the
hot
sun
was
setting.
The
streets
of
Laredo
grew
cold
as
the
clay.
We
took
the
young
cowboy
down
to
the
green
valley,
And
there
stands
his
marker,
we
made,
to
this
day.
We
beat
the
drum
slowly
and
played
the
Fife
lowly,
Played
the
dead
march
as
we
carried
him
along.
Down
in
the
green
valley,
laid
the
sod
o'er
him.
He
was
a
young
cowboy
and
he
said
he'd
done
wrong.
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