635 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
635 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: freenet.shrine.songs
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From: aa300 (Jerry Murphy)
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Subject: Songs from the Civil War
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Date: Wed, 24 Jan 90 15:56:57 EST
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:MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM:
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:CIVIL WAR SONGBOOK:
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:MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM:
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THE BATTLE CRY OF FREEDOM - George F. Root, 1862
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Yes, we'll rally round the flag, boys
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rally once again,
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Shouting the Battle Cry of Freedom
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And we'll rally from the hillside
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We'll gather from the plains,
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Shouting the Battle Cry of Freedom
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Chorus:
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Forever, hurrah boys hurrah!
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Down with the traitor and up with the star,
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And we'll rally round the flag, boys
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We'll rally once again
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Shouting the Battle Cry of Freedom
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We are springing to the call
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For three hundred thousand more,
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Shouting the Battle Cry of Freedom.
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And we'll fill the vacant ranks
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From our brothers gone before,
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Shouting the Battle Cry of Freedom
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Chorus:
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We will welcom to our numbers
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The loyal, true and brave,
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Shouting the Battle Cry of Freedom
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And altho' he may be poor
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He will never be a slave,
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Shouting the Battle Cry of Freedom.
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Chorus:
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So we're springing to the call
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From the East and from the West,
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Shouting the Battle Cry of Freedom.
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And we'll hurl the rebel crew
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From the land we love the best,
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Shouting the Battle Cry of Freedom
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Chorus:
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MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA - Henry Clay Work, 1865
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Bring the good ol' Bugle boys
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We'll sing another song--
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Sing it with the spirit
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That will start the world along--
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Sing it like we used to sing it
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Fifty thousand strong,
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While we were marching through Georgia
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Chorus:
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Hurrah! Hurrah! We bring the jubilee!
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Hurrah! Hurrah! The flag that makes you free!
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So we sang the chorus from
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Atlanta to the Sea,
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While we were marching through Georgia
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How the darkeys shouted when they
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heard the joyful sound,
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How the turkeys gobbled which our
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Commissary found,
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How the sweet potatoes even
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Started from the ground,
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While we were marching through Georgia
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Chorus
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Yes and there were Union men
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Who wept with joyful tears,
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When they saw the honored flag
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They had not seen for years;
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Hardly could they be restrained
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From breaking forth in cheers,
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While we were marching through Georgia
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Chorus
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"Sherman's dashing Yankee boys
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Will never make the coast!"
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So the saucy rebels said
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and 'twas a handsome boast
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Had they not forgot, alas!
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To reckon with the Host
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While we were marching through Georgia
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Chorus
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So we made a thoroughfare for
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Freedom and her train,
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Sixty miles of latitude--
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Three hundred to the main;
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Treason fled before us,
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For resistance was in vain
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While we were marching through Georgia
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ALL QUIET ALONG THE POTOMAC TONIGHT - Lyics: Ethel Beers
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Music: John Hewitt
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1863
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"All quiet along the Potomac tonight,"
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Except here and there a stray picket;
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Is shot as he walks on his beat to and fro,
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By a rifleman hid in the thicket;
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Tis nothing! a private or two now and then,
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Will not count in the new of the battle,
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Not an officer lost! only one of the men
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Moaning out all alone the death rattle.
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"All quiet along the Potomac tonight!"
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"All quiet along the Potomac tonight,"
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Where the soldiers lie peacefully dreaming,
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And the tents in the rays of the clear Autumn moon,
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And the light of the campfires are gleaming;
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There's only the sound of the lone sentry's tread,
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As he tramps from the rock to the fountain,
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And thinks of the two on the low trundle bed,
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Far away in the cot on the mountain.
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"All quiet along the Potomac tonight,"
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His musket falls slack-his face dark and grim,
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Grows gentle with memories tender,
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As he mutters a pray'r for the children asleep
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And their mother "May heaven defend her!"
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The moon seems to shine as brightly as then
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That night, when the love yet unspoken,
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Leap'd up to his lips, and when low murmur'd vows,
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Were pledg'd to be ever unbroken
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"All quiet along the Potomac tonight,"
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Then drawing his sleeve roughly o'er his eyes,
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He dashes off the tears that are welling,
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And gathers his gun close up to his breast,
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As if to keep down the heart's swelling;
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He passes the fountain, the blasted pine tree,
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And his footstep is lagging and weary,
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Yet onward he goes thro' the broad belt of light,
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Toward the shades of the forest so dreary
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"All quiet along the Potomac tonight,"
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Hark! was it the nightwind that rustles the leaves!
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Was it the moonlight so wond'rously flashing?
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It look'd like a rifle! "Ha! Mary goodbye!"
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And his lifeblood is ebbing and plashing,
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"All quiet along the Potomac tonight",
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No sound save the rush of the river,
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While soft falls the dew on the face of the dead,
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The picket's off duty forever
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"All quiet along the Potomac tonight,"
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THE VACANT CHAIR - George F. Root, 1862
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We shall meet, but we shall miss him,
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there will be one vacant chair;
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We shall linger to caress him,
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While we breath our eveneing prayer
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When a year ago we gathered,
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Joy was in his mild blue eye;
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But a golden chord is severed,
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And our hopes in ruin lie.
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Chorus:
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We shall meet, but we shall miss him,
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There will be one vacant chair;
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We shall linger to caress him,
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When we breath our evening prayer.
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At our fireside, sad and lonely,
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Often will the bosom swell;
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At remembrence of the story,
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How our noble Willie fell;
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How he strove to bear our banner
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Thro' the thickest of the fight,
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And uphold our country's honor,
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In the strength of manhood's might.
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Chorus:
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True they tell us wreaths of glory,
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Evermore will deck his brow,
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But this smooths the anguish only
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Sweeping o'er our heartstrings now.
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Sleep today, o early fallen,
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In thy green and narrow bed,
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Dirges from the pine and cypress,
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Mingle with the tears we shed.
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Chorus
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TRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP - George F. Root, 1864
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In a prison cell I sit,
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Thinking, mother dear, of you
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And our bright and happy home so far away,
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And the tears they fill my eyes,
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spite of all that I can do,
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Tho' I try to cheer my comrades and be gay
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Chorus
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Tramp, tramp, tramp the boys are marching,
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Cheer up comrades, they will come,
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And beneath the starry flag,
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We shall breath the air again,
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Of freedom in our own beloved home.
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In the battle front we stood,
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When the fiercest charge they made,
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And they swept us off a hundred men or more,
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But before we reached their lines,
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They were beaten back dismayed,
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And we heard the cry of victory o'er and o'er
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Chorus
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So within a prison cell,
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We are waiting for the day,
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That shall come to open wide the iron door,
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And the hollow eyes grow bright,
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And the poor heary almost gay,
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And we think of seeing friends and home once more.
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Chorus
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HARD TACK - anonymous
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Let us close our game of poker
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Take our tin cups in our hand,
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As we all stand by the cook's tent door;
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As dried mummys of hard crackers,
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Are handed to each man
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Oh hard tack come again no more.
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Chorus:
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It's the song the sigh of the hungry,
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Oh hard tack, hard tack, come again no more.
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Many days have you lingered upon our stomachs sore,
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Oh hard tack come again no more.
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It's a hungry, thirsty soldier
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who wears his life away,
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In torn clothes his better days are gone.
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And he's sighing now for whiskey
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In a voice as dry as hay
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Oh hard tack come again no more.
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Chorus:
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It's the wail that is heard in the camps
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Both night and day
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Tis the murmur that's mingled with each snore;
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It's the sighing of the soul
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for spring chickens far away,
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Oh hard tack come again no more.
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Chorus
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But to all these cries and murmurs
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There comes a sudden hush,
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As frail forms are fainting by the ooor
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For they feed us now on horse feed,
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That the cooks call mush,
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Oh hard tack come again once more.
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Last chorus
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It's the dying wail fo the starving,
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Oh hard tack, hard tack, come again once more,
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You were old and very wormy, but we passed
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your failings o'er,
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Oh hard tack come again once more.
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THE ARMY BEAN - Anonymous
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There's a spot that the soldiers all love,
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The cook tents the place that we mean,
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And the dish we love best to find there,
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Is the old fashioned white army bean.
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Chorus:
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'Tis the bean, that we mean,
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And we eat as we nevr' ate before,
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The army bean, nice and clean,
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We will stick to our beans evermore.
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Now the bean in its primitive state,
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Is a plant we have all often met,
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But when cooked in the old army style,
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It has a charge we can never forget
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Chorus:
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Now the German is fond of sauerkraut,
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And the potato is loved bye the Mick
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But the soldiers have long since found out,
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That through life to our beans we must stick.
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Last chorus:
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Tis the bean, that we mean,
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And we eat as we nevr' ate before,
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The army bean, nice and clean,
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We will stick to our beans evermore.
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The army bean, nice and clean,
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We will stick to our beans evermore.
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OLD BLACK JOE - By S.C. Foster, 1860
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Gone are the days when my heart was young and gay,
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Gone are my friends from the cotton fields away,
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Gone from the earth to a better land I know,
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I hear their gentle voices calling "Old Black Joe".
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Chorus
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I'm coming, I'm coming, for my head is bending low,
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I hear their gentle voices calling "Old Black Joe".
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Why do I weep, when my heart should feel no pain,
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Why do I sigh that my friends come not again.
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Grieving for forms now departed long ago.
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I hear their gentle voices calling "Old Black Joe"
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Chorus
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Where are the hearts once so happy and so free?
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The children so dear that I held upon my knee
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Gone to the shore where my soul has longed to go,
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I hear their gentle voices calling "Old Black Joe"
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Chorus
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OLD FOLKS AT HOME - E.P. Christy, 1851
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Way down upon the Swannee ribber, far, far away,
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Dere's wha my heart is turning ebber,
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Dere's wha de old folks stay,
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All around de little farm I wandered, when I was young
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Den many happy days I squandered, many de songs I sung,
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When I was playing wid my brudder, happy was I,
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Oh! take me to my kind old mudder, dere let me live and die
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Chorus:
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All de world am sad and dreary, ebry where I roam,
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Oh! darkeys how my heart grows weary,
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Far from de old folks at home.
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One little hut among de bushes, one dat I love,
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Still sadly to my mem'ry rushes, no matter where I rove,
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When will I see de bees a hummin' all round de comb,
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When will I hear de banjo tumming, down in my good old home.
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Chorus
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JUST BEFORE THE BATTLE MOTHER - Goerge F. Root, 1863
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Just before the battle mother,
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I am thinking most of you;
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While upon the field we're watching,
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With the enemy in view.
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Comrades brave around me lying,
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Filled with thoughts of home and God;
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For well they know upon the morrow,
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Some will sleep beneath the sod
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Chorus
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Farewell mother you may never
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Press me to your heart again;
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But, oh, you'll not forget me mother,
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If I'm numbered with the slain
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Oh, I long to see you mother,
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and the loving ones at home;
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But I'll never leave our banner,
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'till in honor I can come.
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Tell the enemy around you
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That their cruel words, we know,
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In every battle kill our soldiers
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by the help they give the foe.
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Chorus:
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Hark! I hear the bugles sounding,
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'Tis the signal for the fight,
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Now may God protect us mother,
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as he ever does the right.
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Hear the "Battle Cry of Freedom",
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How it swells upon the air,
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Oh yes, we'll rally round the standard
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Or we'll perish nobly there.
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Chorus
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TENTING ON THE OLD CAMPGROUND - Walter Kittridge, 1864
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We're tenting tonight on the old campground,
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Give us a song to cheer
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Our weary hearts, a song of home,
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And friends we love so dear.
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Chorus:
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Many are the hearts that are weary tonight,
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Wishing for the war to cease,
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Many are the hearts, looking for the right,
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To see the dawn of peace.
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Tenting tonight, tenting tonight,
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Tenting on the old campground.
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We've been tenting tonight on the old campground,
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Thinking of days gone by;
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Of the loved ones at home that gave us the hand,
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And the tear that said "goodbye!"
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Chorus:
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We've been fighting today on the old campground,
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Many are lying near,
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Some are dead and some are dying,
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Many are in tears.
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Last Chorus:
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Many are the hearts that are weary tonight,
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Wishing for the war to cease,
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Many are the hearts, looking for the right,
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To see the dawn of peace.
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Dying tonight, dying tonight,
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Dying on the old campground.
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KINGDOM COMING: - Henry Clay Work, 1862
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Say darkeys hab you seen de massa,
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Wid de muffstash on his face,
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Gos long de road sometime dis mornin'
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Like he gwine to leab de place?
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He seen a smoke way up de ribber,
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Where de Linkum gumboats lay;
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He took his hat an' lef' berry sudden
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An' I spec he's run away.
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Chorus:
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De massa run? Ha! Ha! De darkeys stay. Ho! Ho!
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It mus' be now de kingdom comin' and de year ob Jubilo!
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He six foot one way, two foot tudder
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An' he way tree hundred pound,
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his coat so big, he couldn't pay de tailor,
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An' it won't go half way round.
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He drill so much they call him cap'an
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An' he get so drefful tann'd,
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I spec he try and fool dem Yankees
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For to tink he's contraband!
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Chorus:
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De oberseer he make us trouble
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and he dribe us round a spell;
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We lock him up in de somkehouse cellar
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Wid de key trown down de well.
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De whip is lost de han'cuff broken,
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But de massa'll hab his pay.
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He's ole enough, big enough to outght to known better
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dan to went an' run away.
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Chorus
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GOOBER PEAS - A. Pender
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Sitting by the roadside on a summer day.
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Chatting with my messmates passing time away,
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Lying in the shadows underneath the threes,
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Goodness how delicious, eating Goober Peas!
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Chorus:
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Peas! Peas! Peas! Peas! Eating goober peas,
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Goodness how delicious, eating goober peas!
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When the horseman passes, the soldiers have a rule,
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To cry out at their loudest "Mister here's your mule"
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But another pleasure enchantinger than these,
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Is wearing out your grinders, eating goober peas.
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Chorus:
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Just before the battle the General hears a row,
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He ways "The yanks are coming, I hear their rifles now,"
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He turns around in wonder and what do you think he sees,
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The Georgia militia eating Goober peas!
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Chorus:
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I think my song has lasted almost long enough,
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The subject's interesting, but the rhymes are mighty rough,
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I wish this war was over, when free from rags and fleas,
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We'd kiss our wives and sweethearts and gobble goober peas!
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Chorus:
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BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC - Julia Ward Howe, 1862
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Mine eyes have seen the glory
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of the coming of the lord,
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He is trampling out the vintage
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Where the grapes of wrath are stored
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He hath loosed his fateful lightning
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of his terrible swift sword,
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His truth is marching on.
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Chorus:
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Glory! Glory! Hallelujah!
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Glory! Glory! Hallelujah!
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Glory! Glory! Hallelujah!
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His truth is marching on
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I have seen him in the watchfires of a
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hundred circling camps,
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They have builded him an alter in the evening
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dews and damps
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I can read his righteous sentence
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by the dim and flaring lamps;
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His day is marching on.
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Chorus:
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I have read a firey gospel
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Writ in burnished rows of steel
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"As ye deal with my contemners,
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So with you my grace will deal;
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Let the hero born of woman
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Crush the serpent with his heel;
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Since God is marching on.
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Chorus:
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In the beauty of the lilies
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Christ was born across the sea
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With a glory in his bosom
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That transfigures you and me;
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As he died to make men holy
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ley us die to make men free,
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While God is marching on.
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Chorus:
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WEEPING, SAD AND LONELY - Lyrics: Charles C. Sawyer
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Music: Henry Tucker
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1862
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Dearest love do you remember,
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When we lst did meet,
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How you told me that you loved me,
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Kneeling at my feet?
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Oh! How proud you stood before me,
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In your suit of blue,
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When you vow'd to me and country,
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Ever to be true
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Chorus:
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Weeping, sad and lonely,
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Hopes and fears, how vain,
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when this cruel war is over,
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Praying! That we meet again.
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When the summer breeze is sighing,
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Mournfully along
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Or when autumn leaves are falling,
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Sadly breathes the song.
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Oft in dreams I see thee lying,
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Oh the battle plain,
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Lonely, wounded, even dying,
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Calling but in vain.
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Chorus:
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If amid the din of battle,
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Nobly you should fall,
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Far away from those who love you,
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None to hear your call.
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Who would whisper words of comfort,
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Who would soothe your plain?
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Ah! The many cruel fancies,
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Ever in my brain.
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Chorus:
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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Another file downloaded from: NIRVANAnet(tm)
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& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Jeff Hunter 510-935-5845
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Rat Head Ratsnatcher 510-524-3649
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Burn This Flag Zardoz 408-363-9766
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realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 415-567-7043
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Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 415-583-4102
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Specializing in conversations, obscure information, high explosives,
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arcane knowledge, political extremism, diversive sexuality,
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insane speculation, and wild rumours. ALL-TEXT BBS SYSTEMS.
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Full access for first-time callers. We don't want to know who you are,
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where you live, or what your phone number is. We are not Big Brother.
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"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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