paroles de chanson East Texas Red - Tom Russell
(Woddy
Guthrie)
Down
in
the
scrub
oak
country
To
the
southeast
Texas
Gulf
There
used
to
ride
a
brakeman,
A
brakeman
double
tough.
He
worked
the
town
of
Kilgore,
And
Longview
twelve
miles
down,
And
the
travellers
all
said
Little
East
Texas
Red
He
was
the
meanest
bull
around.
If
you
rode
by
night
or
the
broad
daylight
In
the
wintery
wind
or
the
sun,
You
would
always
see
little
East
Texas
Red
Just
a
sportin'
his
smooth-runnin
gun.
And
the
tale
got
switched
down
the
stems
and
mains,
And
everybody
said
That
the
meanest
bull
On
them
shiney
irons
Was
that
little
East
Texas
Red.
It
was
on
a
cold
and
a
windy
morn'
It
was
along
towards
nine
or
ten,
A
couple
of
boys
on
the
hunt
of
a
job
They
stood
that
blizzardy
wind.
Hungry
and
cold
they
knocked
on
the
doors
Of
the
workin'
people
around
For
a
piece
of
meat
And
a
carrot
or
spud
just
a
boil
of
stew
around.
East
Texas
Red
come
down
the
line
And
he
swung
off
that
old
number
two.
He
kicked
their
bucket
over
a
bush
And
he
dumped
out
all
of
their
stew.
The
travellers
said,
"Little
East
Texas
Red,
You
better
get
your
business
straight
Cause
you're
gonna
ride
Your
little
black
train
just
one
year
from
today."
Well
Red
he
laughed
and
he
climbed
the
bank
And
he
swung
on
the
side
of
a
wheeler,
The
boys
caught
a
tanker
to
Seminole
Then
west
to
Amarillo.
They
caught
them
a
job
of
oil-field
work
And
followed
a
pipeline
down.
It
took
them
lots
of
places
Before
that
year
Had
rolled
around.
Then
on
a
cold
and
windy
day
They
caught
them
a
Gulf-bound
train.
They
shivered
and
shook
with
the
dough
in
their
clothes
To
the
scrub
oak
flats
again,
With
their
warm
suits
of
clothes
and
overcoats
They
walked
into
a
store.
They
paid
that
man
For
some
meat
and
stuff
Just
a
boil
of
stew
once
more.
The
ties
they
tracked
down
that
cinder
dump
And
they
come
to
the
same
old
spot
Where
East
Texas
Red
just
a
year
ago
Had
dumped
their
last
stew
pot.
Well,
the
smoke
of
their
fire
went
higher
and
higher
And
Red
come
down
the
line.
With
his
head
tucked
low
in
the
wintery
wind
He
waved
old
number
nine.
He
walked
on
down
through
the
jungle
yard
And
he
came
to
the
same
old
spot
And
there
was
the
same
two
men
again
Around
that
same
stew
pot.
Red
went
to
his
kness
and
he
hollered
"Please,
don't
pull
your
trigger
on
me.
I
did
not
get
my
business
straight."
But
he
did
not
get
his
say.
A
gun
wheeled
out
of
an
overcoat
And
it
played
that
old
one
two,
And
Red
was
dead
when
the
other
two
men
Sat
down
to
eat
their
stew.
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