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Ballad of The Alamo
Dimitri
Tiompkin & P.F. Webster
In the southern
part of Texas, in the town of San Antone,
there's a fortress all in ruin that the weeds have
overgrown.
You may look in vain for crosses and you'll never see a
one,
but sometime between the setting and the rising of the sun
you can hear a ghostly bugle as the men go marching by;
you can hear them as they answer to that roll call in the
sky:
Colonel Travis, Davy Crockett and a hundred eighty more;
Captain Dickenson, Jim Bowie, present and accounted for.
Back in 1836,
Houston said to Travis,
"Get some volunteers and go - fortify the
Alamo."
Well, the men came from Texas and from old Tennessee,
and they joined up with Travis just to fight for the right
to be free.
Indian scouts with squirrel guns, men with muzzle loaders
stood together heel and toe to defend the Alamo.
"You may never see your loved ones," Travis told
them that day,
"those that want to can leave now, those who'll fight
to the death, let 'em stay."
In the sand he
drew a line with his army saber,
and out of a hundred eighty five, not a soldier crossed
the line.
With his banners a-dancin' in the dawn's golden light,
Santa Anna came prancin' on a horse that was black as the
night.
He sent an
officer to tell Travis to surrender.
Travis answered with a shell and a rousin' rebel yell.
Santa Anna turned scarlet; "Play Degüello,"
he roared,
"I will show them no quarter, everyone will be put to
the sword."
One hundred and
eighty five holdin' back five thousand,
five days, six days, eight days, ten; Travis held and held
again,
then he sent for replacements for his wounded and lame,
but the troops that were comin' - never came.
Twice he
charged, then blew recall, and on the fatal third time,
Santa Anna breached the wall and he killed them one and
all.
Now the bugles are silent and there's rust on each sword,
and the small band of soldiers lie asleep in the arms of
The Lord.
In the southern
part of Texas, in the town of San Antone,
like a statue on his Pinto rides a cowboy all alone,
and he sees the cattle grazin' where a century before
Santa Anna's guns were blazin' and the cannons used to
roar,
and his eyes turn sort of misty, and his heart begins to
glow,
and he takes his hat off slowly to the men of Alamo...
to the thirteen days of glory at the seige of Alamo.
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