| 'Twas sunset down in old Key West
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| The locals all were high.
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| The tourists snapped their photographs
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| And munched their Key Lime pie.
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| And meanwhile down at Sloppy Joe’s
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| The drinks were standin' tall
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| With Buffett on the jukebox
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| And Hemingway on the wall.
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| Then up spoke Sam the Shrimper:
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| He said, «I've been a shrimper all my life.
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| My daddy was a shrimper
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| And my mom’s a shrimper’s wife.
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| And I’m tired of bein' a shrimper
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| 'cause a shrimper’s life’s too tame
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| So I’m gonna ride the Conch Train, boys,
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| And be like Jesse James.
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| Gonna be like Jesse James, boy…
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| Gonna be like Jesse James.
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| Case you didn’t hear me the first three times…
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| Gonna be like Jesse James.»
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| Now the Conch Train is a tourist toy
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| That rolls through Key West Town
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| Like some weird ride from Disneyland
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| It drives the tourists round and round
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| While the engineer on her P.A.
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| Points out all the sites
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| «Well, Tennessee did you-know-what
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| To you-know-who that night.»
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| «The tourists all have money», said Sam
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| «Their wives all have rings of gold.
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| Their mopeds all are pawnable.
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| Their cameras can be sold.
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| And think of all the glory, boys,
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| The money and the fame
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| To be the first and only man
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| To rob the Key West Train.»
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| Now the engineer of the Conch Train
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| Her name was Betsy Wright.
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| She drove the Conch Train all day long
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| And loved Shrimper Sam all night.
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| And with some sweet persuasion,
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| She agreed to join the game:
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| She’d slow it down and flag the lad
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| And let him ride the train.
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| The conch train made its turn
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| Down the Smathers Pitch
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| When Shrimper Sam with a snorkle eye
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| Leaped naked from the sea.
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| His fillet knife was in his hand.
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| He jumped aboard the train.
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| «Give up your bucks, you tourist schmucks.
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| I’m Key West Jesse James.
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| I’m Key West Jesse James, boy…
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| Key West Jesse James…
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| Case you didn’t hear me the first three times…
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| I’m Key West Jesse James.»
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| Now unbeknownst to Shrimper Sam
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| In the third car from the rear,
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| Sat Kelso Bolls from Muscle Shoals,
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| An American Legioneer.
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| He was a redneck of respect
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| And a marksman of reknown.
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| From under his fat
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| He drew a Gat,
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| And shot the shrimper down.
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| Now the first time that he shot poor Sam,
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| Sam groaned and clutched his side.
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| The second time that he shot poor Sam,
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| Sam fell to his knees and cried.
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| And the third time that he shot poor Sam,
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| You could see in both their eyes
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| Lash LaRue and Randolph Scott
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| Beneath the Western skies.
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| We laid poor Sam upon the sand
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| And we lifted up his head.
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| We listened close to hear the words
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| The dying shrimper said.
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| He said, «Boys, you know I had my chance
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| But I went and botched the job,
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| But how can a boy named Jesse James
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| Without a train to rob?»
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| Then Kelso Bolls took off his hat
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| And the tears streamed down his face.
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| He said, «Son, I know just how you feel.
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| This world’s a changin' place».
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| When history is written,
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| Uh… they won’t recall our names,
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| But I only got to play Pat Garrett
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| 'cause you played Jesse James.
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| We buried Sam in the southernmost sands
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| Close by the southernmost waves
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| Where sweet Betsy Wright
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| Cries tears every night
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| Onto his southernmost grave.
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| And on his tombstone say the words
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| «Stick to your own game.
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| And if you are a shrimper,
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| Do not try to rob a train.» |