paroles de chanson Claude Dallas - Ian Tyson
In
a
land
the
Spanish
once
had
called
the
Northern
Mystery,
Where
rivers
run
and
disappear
the
mustang
still
is
free.
By
the
Devil's
wash
and
coyote
hole
in
the
wild
Owyhee
Range
Somewhere
in
the
sage
tonight
the
wind
calls
out
his
name.
Aye,
aye,
aye.
Come
gather
'round
me
buckaroos
and
a
story
I
will
tell
Of
the
fugitive
Claude
Dallas
who
just
broke
out
of
jail.
You
might
think
this
tale
is
history
from
before
the
West
was
won,
But
the
events
that
I'll
describe
took
place
in
nineteen
eighty-one.
He
was
born
out
in
Virginia,
left
home
when
school
was
through;
In
the
deserts
of
Nevada
he
became
a
buckaroo,
And
he
learned
the
ways
of
cattle,
and
he
learned
to
sit
a
horse,
And
he
always
packed
a
pistol,
and
he
practiced
deadly
force.
Then
Claude
he
became
a
trapper,
and
he
dreamed
of
the
bygone
days,
And
he
studied
bobcat
logic
and
their
wild
and
silent
ways
In
the
bloody
runs
near
Paradise,
in
monitors
down
south
Trapping
cats
and
coyotes,
living
hand
to
mouth.
Aye,
aye,
aye.
Then
Claude
took
to
livin'
all
alone
out
many
miles
from
town,
A
friend--Jim
Stevens--brought
supplies
and
he
stayed
to
hang
around.
That
day
two
wardens--Pogue
and
Elms--rode
into
check
Claude
out,
They
were
seeking
violations
and
to
see
what
Claude's
about.
Now
Claude
had
hung
some
venison,
he
had
a
bobcat
pelt
or
two,
Pogue
claimed
they
were
out
of
season,
he
said
"Dallas,
you're
all
through."
But
Dallas
would
not
leave
his
camp.He
refused
to
go
to
town.
As
the
wind
howled
thought
the
bull-camp
they
stared
each
other
down.
Its
hard
to
say
what
happened
next,
perhaps
we'll
never
know,
They
were
gonna
take
Claude
in
to
jail,
and
he
vowed
he'd
never
go.
Jim
Stevens
heard
the
gunfire,
and
when
he
turned
around
Bill
Pogue
was
falling
backwards,
Conley
Elms
he
fell
face
down.
Aye,
aye,
aye.
Jim
Stevens
walked
on
over;
there
was
a
gun
near
Bill
Pogue's
hand.
It
was
hard
to
say
who
drawn
his
first,
but
Claude
had
made
his
stand.
Claude
said
"I
am
justified
Jim,
they
were
gonna
cut
me
down,
And
a
man's
got
a
right
to
hang
some
meat
When
he's
livin'
this
far
from
town."
It
took
eighteen
men
and
fifteen
months
to
finally
run
Claude
down.
In
the
sage
outside
of
Paradise
they
drove
him
to
the
ground.
Convicted
up
in
Idaho--manslaughter
by
decree--
Thirty
years
at
maximum,
but
soon
Claude
would
break
free.
There's
two
sides
two
this
story,
there
may
be
no
right
or
wrong,
The
lawman
and
the
renegade
have
graced
a
thousand
songs.
The
story
is
an
old
one.Conclusion's
hard
to
draw,
But
Claude's
out
in
the
sage
tonight
he
may
be
the
last
outlaw.
Aye,
aye,
aye.
In
a
land
the
Spanish
once
had
called
the
Northern
Mystery,
Where
rivers
run
and
disappear
the
mustang
still
is
free.
By
the
Devil's
wash
and
the
coyote
hole
in
the
wild
Owyhee
Range
Somewhere
in
the
sage
tonight
the
wind
calls
out
his
name.
Aye,
aye,
aye
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