She Was Bred In Old Kentucky
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[Verse 1]
When a lad, I stood one day
by a cottage far away,
And to me that day, all nature seem'd more grand;
For my Sue, with blushes red,
had just promised we should wed,
And I'd come to ask her mother for her hand.
As I told the old, old tale,
of a love that n'er would fail,
The grayhaired mother stroked her daughter's head,
And I fancied I could trace
just a tear on her kind face,
As she placed my sweetheart's hand in mine and said,
[Chorus]
She was bred in old Kentucky,
Where the meadow grass is blue,
There's the sunshine of the country, in her face and manner too;
She was bred in old Kentucky,
Take her boy, you're mighty lucky,
When you marry a girl like Sue.
[Verse 2]
Many years have pass'd away
since that well remember'd day,
When to that dear old Kentucky home I came;
And my happiness thro' life,
was my sweetheart friend and wife,
For the sunshine in her heart remained the same.
I am sitting all alone,
in the place we've long called home,
For yesterday my darling passed away;
Tho' in tears I think with joy
of the day when but a oy,
That I took her hand and heard her mother say,
[Chorus]
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.
This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
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