paroles de chanson Barbara Allen - Art Garfunkel
All
in
the
merry
month
of
May,
When
green
buds
all
are
swellin'.
Sweet
William
on
his
deathbed
lay
for
love
of
Barbara
Allen.
He
sent
his
servant
to
the
town,
The
place
where
she
did
dwell
in.
Saying,
'Master
dear
has
sent
me
here
if
your
name
be
Barbara
Allen.'
Then
slowly,
slowly
she
got
up
and
slowly
she
went
to
him,
And
all
she
said
when
there
she
came
was,
'Young
man,
I
think
you're
dying.
'Don't
you
remember
the
other
night
when
we
were
in
the
tavern?
You
drank
a
toast
to
the
ladies
there
and
slighted
Barbara
Allen.'
He
turned
his
face
unto
the
wall,
He
turned
his
back
upon
her.
'Adieu,
adieu,
to
all
my
friends.
And
be
kind,
be
kind
to
Barbara
Allen.'
As
she
was
wandering
on
the
fields
she
heard
the
death
bell
knellin'.
And
every
note,
it
seemed
to
say,
'Hard-hearted
Barbara
Allen!'
The
more
it
tolled
the
more
she
grieved,
She
bursted
out
a-crying.
'Oh,
pick
me
up
and
carry
me
home.
I
fear
that
I
am
dying.'
They
buried
Willy
in
the
old
church
yard
and
Barbara
in
the
new
one,
And
from
William's
grave,
there
grew
a
rose,
from
Barbara's,
a
green
briar.
They
grew
and
grew
in
the
old
church
yard,
Till
they
could
grow
no
higher,
And
there
they
tied
in
a
true
lover's
knot,
The
red
rose
and
the
briar.
Attention! N'hésitez pas à laisser des commentaires.