paroles de chanson Mary Of The Moor - The Louvin Brothers
It
was
on
one
cold
wintery
nite,
When
the
wind
blew
across
the
wild
moor.
When
Mary
came
wandering
home
with
her
child,
'Till
she
came
to
her
own
fathers
door.
Father
dear
father
she
cried,
Come
down
and
open
the
door.
Or
the
child
in
my
arms
will
perish
and
die
From
the
winds
that
blow
across
the
wild
moor.
Why
did
I
leave
this
fair
spot,
Where
once
I
was
happy
and
free,
I
am
now
tune
to
roam
without
friends
or
a
home,
And
no
one
to
take
pity
on
me
But
her
father
was
deaf
to
her
cries,
Not
a
sound
of
her
voice
did
he
hear.
So
the
watchdog
did
howl,
and
the
village
bells
tolled,
And
the
wind
blew
across
the
wild
moor.
Oh
how
the
old
man
must've
felt,
When
he
came
to
the
door
on
next
morn,
And
he
found
Mary
dead
but
the
child
still
alive,
Closely
grasped
in
his
dead
mothers
arms.
In
anger
he
tore
his
grey
hair.
And
the
tears
down
his
cheeks
they
did
pour.
When
he
saw
how
that
nite
she
had
perished
and
died.
From
the
wind
that
blew
across
the
wild
moor.
In
grief
the
old
man
pined
away,
And
the
child
to
its
mother
went
soon.
And
no
one
they
say
have
lived
that
to
these
days
And
the
cottage
to
ruin
has
gone.
But
the
villagers
point
out
the
spot,
Where
the
willow
pours
over
the
door.
Saying
there
Mary
died
once
a
gay
village
find,
From
the
wind
that
blew
across
the
wild
moor.
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