| On Hounslow Heath as I rode o’er
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| I spied a lawyer riding before.
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| «Kind sir,"said I, «ain't you afraid,
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| Of Turpin, that mischievous blade?»
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| O rare Turpin hero
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| O rare Turpin O
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| Said Turpin, «He'd ne’er find me out
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| I’ve hid my money in my boot.»
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| Says the lawyer, «There's none can find
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| Me gold for it’s stitched in me cape behind.»
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| O rare Turpin hero
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| O rare Turpin O
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| As they rode down by the powder mill
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| Turpin commands him to be still;
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| Says he, «Your cape I must cut off,
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| For my mare she wants a saddle cloth.»
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| O rare Turpin hero
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| O rare Turpin O
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| As Turpin rode in search of prey
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| He met an excise man on the way
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| Then boldly he did bid him stand
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| Your gold he said I do demand
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| O rare Turpin hero
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| O rare Turpin O
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| Turpin then without remorse
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| Soon knocked him quite from off his horse
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| And left him on the ground to sprawl
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| So he rode off with his gold and all
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| O rare Turpin hero
|
| O rare Turpin O
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| So he rode over Salisbury Plain
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| He met lord judge with all his train
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| Then hero-like he did approach
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| And robbed the judge as he sat in his coach
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| O rare Turpin hero
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| O rare Turpin O
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| For the shooting of a dung-hill cock
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| Poor Turpin now at last he’s took
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| And carried straight into a jail
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| Where his ill luck he does bewail
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| O rare Turpin hero
|
| O rare Turpin O
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| Now Turpin is condemned to die
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| To hang upon yon gallows high
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| His legacy is a strong rope
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| For stealing a poor dung-hill cock
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| O rare Turpin hero
|
| O rare Turpin O |