Lyrics The Last Cowboy Song - The Highwaymen
This
is
the
last
cow-boy
song
The
end
of
a
hundred
year
waltz.
The
voices
sound
sad
as
they're
singin'
along.
Another
piece
of
America's
lost.
He
rides
the
feed
lots,
clerks
in
the
markets,
On
weekends
sellin'
tobacco
and
beer.
And
his
dream's
of
tomorrow,
surrounded
by
fences,
But
he'll
dream
tonight
of
when
fences
weren't
here.
He
blazed
the
trail
with
Lewis
and
Clark,
And
eyeball
to
eyeball,
old
Wyatt
backed
down.
He
stood
shoulder
to
shoulder
with
Travis
in
Texas.
And
rode
with
the
Seventh
when
Custer
went
down.
This
is
the
last
cow-boy
song
The
end
of
a
hundred
year
waltz.
The
voices
sound
sad
as
they're
singin'
along.
Another
piece
of
America's
lost.
Remmington
showed
us
how
he
looked
on
canvas,
And
Louis
Lamour
has
told
us
his
tale.
Me
and
Johnny
and
Waylon
and
Kris
sing
about
him,
And
wish
to
God
we
could
have
ridden
his
trail.
The
old
Chisholm
trail
is
covered
in
concrete
now,
They
truck
it
to
market
in
fifty
foot
rigs.
They
roll
by
his
markings
and
don't
even
notice,
Like
living
and
dying
was
all
he
ever
did.
This
is
the
last
cow-boy
song
The
end
of
a
hundred
year
waltz.
The
voices
sound
sad
as
they're
singin'
along.
Another
piece
of
America's
lost.
This
is
the
last
cow-boy
song
The
end
of
a
hundred
year
waltz.
The
voices
sound
sad
as
they're
singin'
along.
Another
piece
of
America's
lost.
To
Fade.
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