paroles de chanson Color of Sin - Ye Banished Privateers
I
may
be
a
simple
lass,
but
of
sin
I
am
free.
I
say
me
prayers,
attend
the
mass,
so
paradise
I
will
see.
Me
face
is
pretty,
so
I′ve
been
told,
I've
had
me
share
of
swains.
One
of
which
were
far
too
bold,
too
impious
and
too
vain.
So
I
opened
his
gut,
with
a
single
deep
cut,
and
his
boots
turned
warm
n′
red.
Then
he
knelt
in
the
sand,
with
his
bowels
in
hand,
as
slowly
to
death
he
bled.
And
then
the
man
who
looked
fer
bass,
in
me
barrow
at
the
square,
Then
asked
fer
me
to
be
his
lass,
he
said
he'd
pay
me
fair.
But
I
have
kept
me
chastity,
abstained
from
adultery.
But
he
listened
not
and
he
would
not
see,
as
he
reached
put
fer
me.
So
I
shovelled
his
mouth,
down
a
barrel
of
trout,
till
his
knuckles
turned
boney
white.
As
he
struggled
for
air,
but
I
held
him
down
there
'til
he
finally
gave
up
the
fight.
One
day
it
seemed
me
luck
had
turned,
as
there
approached
to
me,
A
noble
lad
who
fer
me
yearned,
he
wished
to
marry
me.
He
courted
me
fer
many
weeks,
′til
finally
I
sad
aye,
But
then
his
friend
with
rosy
cheeks,
tried
drunk
to
with
me
lay.
So
I
had
the
man
hanged,
as
me
wedding
bells
rang,
and
his
pants
turned
solied
n′
brown.
Then
his
eyes
filled
with
blood,
and
he
dropped
in
the
mud,
as
the
hang-man
cut
him
down.
And
so
came
then
me
wedding
night,
fer
which
I
had
so
longed.
But
his
moves
they
were
far
from
right,
to
heathens
they
belonged!
So
I
smothered
me
man,
with
me
pillow
in
hand,
'till
his
prick
turned
stiff
and
black.
Then
I
dug
him
a
grave,
so
his
soul
I′d
save
Now
I
a
widow
may
be,
but
from
sin
I
am
free,
Now
I
a
widow
may
be,
but
from
sin
I
am
free
And
with
his
pension,
I
money
won't
lack.
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