| Friends, most of my bush ballards are based on true stories
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| I’d like to sing for you now a story that is 100% true
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| Because I know the family that grandfather Johnson lived with,
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| And like most bush ballards and story songs these
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| ballards explain themselves as they move along.
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| Here is the true story of Grandfather Johnson.
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| Grandfather Johnson was an old blackman
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| From a real proud race of men
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| When he was a child he heard them tell of butcher’s creek
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| And the story was old even then.
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| How the white man came and took over the land
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| And the blood of the blackman mixed with white
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| But grandfather Johnson was a fullblood man,
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| Proud of his people and their rights,
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| Now grandfather Johnson was a tribal man
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| He knew all the old hunting ways
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| He knew how to wield the nulla throw the killer boomerang
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| And he’d entertain the tourists everyday.
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| And grandfather Johnson had a brand new suit
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| A new hat for his snowy headed crown
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| But whenever the tourists where about to arrive
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| He would change into his old hand me downs.
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| When I asked him the reason he said son you ought to know
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| My old working clothes look better for the part
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| I’m just old grandfather Johnson making boomerangs for sale
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| I’d lose business if I went around looking smart.
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| So he sold them boomerangs and taught them to throw
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| And they bragged for months of seeing the real thing
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| When they’d gone grandpa dressed up took his money from a bag
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| And smiled as he paid cash for a new gold ring.
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| He would always bail me up when we met in town
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| And he’d bite me for some money or a smoke
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| Oh but I can’t forget the day I had to tell grandfather
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| I was sorry but I was stoney broke.
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| He just nodded and emptied out his pockets
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| The notes and the silver flowed apace
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| With a twinkle in his eye he shoved the money in my hand
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| And laughed at the look upon my face.
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| Well grandfather Johnson died one year on walkabout
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| In a strange land alone in the dark
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| No one new his name or knew from where he came
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| They just found him dead one morning in the park.
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| And they buried grandpa Johnson as a pauper
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| It was months and months before I even knew
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| I gave his money to the hungry, clothes to the poor
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| And his story I’m giving to you,
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| And his story I’m giving to you. |