Gallo Del Cielo
MP3
Excerpt
Tom
Russell - End Of The Trail Music (SOCAN)
Carlos Zaragosa
left his home in Casas Grandes when the moon was full,
no money in his pocket, just a locket of his sister framed
in gold.
He rode into El Sueco, stole a rooster called El Gallo Del
Cielo,
and he swam the Rio Grande with that fighter nestled deep
beneath his arm.
El Gallo Del
Cielo was a warrior born in Heaven, so the legends say,
his wings, they had been broken, he had one eye rollin'
crazy in his head,
and he fought a hundred fights, but the legends say that
one night near El Sueco,
they fought Gallo seven times, and seven times he left
brave roosters dead.
Hola, my
Theresa, I am thinking of you now in San Antonio.
I have twenty-seven dollars and the good luck of your
picture framed in gold.
Tonight I'll put it all on the fighting spurs of Gallo Del
Cielo,
and I'll return to buy the land that Pancho Villa stole
from Father long ago.
Outside of San
Diego in the onion fields of Paco Monteverde,
the pride of San Diego lay sleeping on a fancy bed of
silk,
and they laughed when Zaragosa pulled the one-eyed Del
Cielo from beneath his coat,
but they cried when Zaragosa walked away with a thousand
dollar bill.
Hola, my
Theresa, I am thinking of you now in Santa Barbara.
I have fifteen-hundred dollars and the good luck of your
picture framed in gold.
Tonight I'll put it all on the fighting spurs of Gallo Del
Cielo,
and I'll return to buy the land that Pancho Villa stole
from Father long ago.
Now the moon
has gone to hiding, the lantern light spills shadows on
the fighting sand
where a wicked black named Zorro faces Gallo Del Cielo in
the night.
But Carlos Zaragosa fears the tiny crack that runs across
his rooster's beak,
and he fears that he has lost the fifty-thousand dollars
riding on the fight.
Hola, my
Theresa, I am thinking of you now in Santa Clara.
Yes, the money is on the tabel and I'm holding to your
good luck framed in gold,
and everything we've dreamed of is riding on the spurs of
Del Cielo.
I pray that I'll return to buy the land Villa stole from
Father long ago.
Then the
signal, it was given, and the the roosters rose together
high above the sand.
El Gallo Del Cielo sunk a gaff into Zorro's shiny breast.
They were separated quickly, but they rose and fought each
other thirty-seven times,
and the legends say that everyone agreed that Del Cielo
fought the best.
Then the
screams of Zaragosa filled the night outside the town of
Santa Clara
as the beak of Del Cielo lay broken like a shell within
his hand,
and they say that Zaragosa screamed a curse upon the bones
of Pancho Villa
when Zorro rose up one last time and drove del Cielo to
the sand.
Hola, my
Theresa, I am thinking of you now in San Antonio.
I have no money in my pocket, I no longer have your
picture framed in gold.
I buried it last evening with the bones of my beloved Del
Cielo,
and I'll not return to buy the land Villa stole from
Father long ago.
Do the rivers
still run muddy outside of my beloved Casas Grandes?
Does the scar upon my brother's face turn red when he
hears mention of my name?
Do the people of El Sueco curse the death of Gallo Del
Cielo?
Well, tell my family not to worry, I will not return to
cause them shame.
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