| South Coast, the wild coast, is lonely
|
| You may win at the game at Jolon
|
| But the lion still rules the barranca, and a man there is always alone
|
| My name is Juan Hano de Castro
|
| My father was a Spanish grandee
|
| But I won my wife in a card game, when a man lost his daughter to me
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| I picked up the ace
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| I had won her!
|
| My heart, which was down at my feet
|
| Jumped up to my throat in a hurry-
|
| Like a warm summers' day, she was sweet
|
| South Coast, the wild coast, is lonely
|
| You may win at the game at Jolon
|
| But the lion still rules the barranca, and a man there is always alone
|
| Her arms had to tighten around me as we rode up the hills from the South
|
| Not a word did I hear from her that day- or a kiss from her pretty red mouth
|
| We came to my cabin at twilight
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| The stars twinkled out on the coast
|
| She soon loved the valley- the orchard- but I knew that she loved me the most
|
| South Coast, the wild coast, is lonely
|
| You may win at the game at Jolon
|
| But the lion still rules the barranca, and a man there is always alone
|
| Then I got hurt in a landslide with crushed hip and twice-broken bone
|
| She saddled our pony like lightning- rode off in the night, all alone
|
| The lion screamed in the barranca; |
| the pony fell back on the slide
|
| My young wife lay dead in the moonlight
|
| My heart died that night with my bride
|
| South Coast, the wild coast, is lonely
|
| You may win at the game at Jolon
|
| But the lion still rules the barranca, and a man there is always alone
|
| Daughters were possessions, to be bet away or arranged marriages for; |
| also,
|
| note the use of «young wife» in the final stanza. |
| Her shyness- «had to tighten»
|
| — and her silent reticence but adaptable «soon loved…» indicates no previous
|
| marriage, and «lost his daughter to me» indicates her origin, whereas «to hell with the lords o’er the sea» seems thrown in. If this man were a sailor,
|
| why would he have established orchards?
|
| Just a thought. |
| I’d really like to see the original music if it were available.
|
| The concept of betting away a daughter was my first exposure to the concept of
|
| women as property and the sung stuck with me my whole life. |
| (I was the oldest
|
| and only daughter and I was afraid of the possibility; |
| I was 9 and the chorus,
|
| except for one word, and the storyline, and the tune have stayed with me for
|
| the last 25 years; |
| it influenced my major «women's studies») |