Maggie Walker Blues

Doc Watson

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    My parents raised me tenderly,
    They had no child but me.
    My mind being placed on rambling,
    With them I couldn't agree
    Just to leave my aged parents
    And them no more to see.

    There was a wealthy gentleman
    Who lived there very near by.
    He had a beautiful daughter,
    On her I cast an eye.
    She was so tall and slender,
    So pretty and so fair.
    There never was a girl in this whole wide world
    With her I could compare.

    I asked her if it differed
    If I crossed over the plain.
    She said, "It makes no difference
    If you never return again."
    We too shook hands and parted,
    And I left my girl behind.

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    I started out in this wide world
    Strange faces for to see.
    I met little Maggie Walker
    And she fell in love with me.
    Her pockets all lined with greenback
    And her labor I'll grow old,
    Now if you'll consent to marry me
    I'll say I'll roam no more.

    I traveled out one morning,
    To the salt works I were bound.
    And when I reached the salt works
    I viewed the city all around.
    Work and money were plentiful
    And the girls all kind to me.
    But the only object to my heart
    Was a girl in Tennessee.

    I traveled out one morning
    Down on the market square.
    The mail train being on arrival,
    I met the carrier there.
    He handed me a letter,
    So's I could understand
    That the girl I left in Tennessee
    Had married another man.

    I drove on down a little further
    And found that it was true.
    I turned my horse and buggy around
    But I didn't know what to do.
    I turned all around and about there --
    Bad company I'll resign;
    I'll drive all about from town to town
    For the girl I left behind.

    Song details

    Composition: Jörgen Elofsson

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