| The air all painted pallid gray
|
| The storm was coming in
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| Folks were lining out in all directions
|
| Me and Holt and Henry Short
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| Were pitching on the skiff
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| Trying to make it home before the night
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| And the gray waves were rolling
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| Bold the brave, brave ocean and rolled us suckers in
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| Well I don’t keep to goings on
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| I tend to stick with kin
|
| But Watson had it in from the beginning
|
| He built that house on Chatham Bend
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| A white-washed knotted pine
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| Ninety acres furrowed for the cane
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| And he drove it down from Georgia
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| His dad a martyred soldier
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| In the war between the states
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| Lord, bring down the flood
|
| Wash away the blood
|
| And drown these everglades
|
| And put us in our place
|
| We laid Edgar Watson in his grave
|
| We laid him in his grave
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| 'Til I’m dust I’ll never know
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| Why he came ashore, with all those killers
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| Gathered on the shoreline
|
| Kicking holes in ugly mud
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| With trigger fingers pinched
|
| A brace of rifles, bristled in the wind
|
| And we towed his body northbound
|
| And buried him all face down with a good view into hell
|
| Lord, bring down the flood
|
| Wash away the blood
|
| And drown these Everglades
|
| And put us in our place
|
| We laid Edgar Watson in his grave
|
| We laid him in his grave
|
| We laid him in his grave
|
| We laid him in his grave |