| Up on the hillside policemen were climbing;
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| The ghosts of the night wind their fantasies did tell
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| Dark on the snow, with the blood drops a-drying
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| Slipped through cold fingers, the whiskey bottle fell
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| Kla-how-ya, mother, I leave you with your white man
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| I curse their church that tells us that our fathers were wrong
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| And I’ll hunt my own mowitch and I’ll drink my own whiskey
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| And I’ll sing until morning the old fashioned song
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| Fires of the potlatch are scattered in their ashes
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| Masache-tamanawis, the evil on remains
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| And our children cannot follow the old nor th new ways
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| And the poles of their fathers are rotting in the rain
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| Kla-how-ya, mother, I leave you with your white man
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| I curse their church that tells us that our fathers were wrong
|
| And I’ll hunt my own mowitch and I’ll drink my own whiskey
|
| And I’ll sing until morning the old fashioned song
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| Daylight came late over high coastal mountains
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| The renegade stood watching, his rifle by his side
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| Then he emptied his gun up into the pale yellow sunrise
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| And he ran down the hillside the to place where he died
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| Kla-how-ya, mother, I leave you with your white man
|
| I curse their church that tells us that our fathers were wrong
|
| And I’ll hunt my own mowitch and I’ll drink my own whiskey
|
| And I’ll sing until morning the old fashioned song |