| Gone are the days when the ox fall down
|
| Take up the yoke and plow the fields around
|
| Gone are the days when the ladies said «Please
|
| Gentle Jack Jones, won’t you come to me»
|
| Brown-eyed women and red grenadine
|
| The bottle was dusty, but the liquor was clean
|
| Sound of the thunder with the rain pourin' down
|
| And it looks like the old man’s gettin' on
|
| 1920 when he stepped to the bar
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| Drank to the dregs of the whiskey jar
|
| 1930 when the wall caved in
|
| He made his way selling red-eyed gin
|
| Brown-eyed women and red grenadine
|
| The bottle was dusty, but the liquor was clean
|
| Sound of the thunder with the rain pourin' down
|
| And it looks like the old man’s gettin' on
|
| Delilah Jones was the mother of twins
|
| Two times over, and the rest were sins
|
| Raised eight boys, only I turned bad
|
| Didn’t get the lickin’s that the other ones had
|
| Brown-eyed women and red grenadine
|
| The bottle was dusty, but the liquor was clean
|
| Sound of the thunder with the rain pourin' down
|
| And it looks like the old man’s gettin' on
|
| Tumble down shack on Big Foot county
|
| Snowed so hard that the roof caved in
|
| Delilah Jones went to meet her God
|
| And the old man never was the same again
|
| Daddy made whiskey and he made it well
|
| Cost two dollars and it burned like hell
|
| I cut hick’ry just to fire the still
|
| Drink down a bottle and be ready to kill
|
| Brown-eyed women and red grenadine
|
| The bottle was dusty, but the liquor was clean
|
| Sound of the thunder with the rain pourin' down
|
| And it looks like the old man’s gettin' on
|
| Gone are the days when the ox fall down
|
| Take up the yoke and plow the fields around
|
| Gone are the days when the ladies said «Please
|
| Gentle Jack Jones, won’t you come to me?»
|
| Brown-eyed women and red grenadine
|
| The bottle was dusty, but the liquor was clean
|
| Sound of the thunder with the rain pourin' down
|
| And it looks like the old man’s gettin' on |