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Tytuł: Old doc brown

  • Wykonawca: Hank Snow
  • Wy¶wietleń: 233

  
   (Spoken)
  He was just an old country doctor
  In a little Kentucky town
  Fame and fortune had passed him by
  But we never saw him frown
  As day by day in his kindly way
  He served us one and all
  Many a patient forgot to pay
  Altho' doc's fees were small
  
  But Old Doc Brown didn't seem to mind
  He didn't even send out bills
  His only ambition was to find
  It seems, sure cures for aches and ills
  Why nearly half the folks in my home town
  Yes, I'm one of them too
  Were ushered in by Old Doc Brown
  When we made our first debut
  
  Tho' he needed his dimes and there were times
  That he'd receive a fee
  He'd pass it on to some poor soul
  That needed it worse than he
  But when the depression hit our town
  And drained each meager purse
  The scanty income of Old Doc Brown
  Just went from bad to worse
  
  He had to sell all of his furniture
  Why, he couldn't even pay his office rent
  So to a dusty room over a Livery stable
  Doc Brown and his practice went
  On the hitchin' post at the curb below
  To advertise his wares
  He nailed a little sign that read
  'Doc Brown has moved upstairs'
  
  There he kept on helpin' folks get well
  And his heart was just pure gold
  But anyone with eyes could see
  That Doc was gettin' old
  And then one day he didn't even answer
  When they knocked upon his door
  Old Doc Brown was a-lyin' down
  But his soul - was no more
  
  They found him there in an old black suit
  And on his face was a smile of content
  But all the money they could find on him
  Was a quarter and a copper cent
  So they opened up his ledger
  And what they saw gave their hearts a pull
  Beside each debtor's name
  Old Doc had (*writ) these words, 'Paid in full'
  
  It looked like the potter's field for Doc
  That caused us some alarm
  'Til someone 'membered the family graveyard
  Out on the Simmons farm
  Old doc had brought six of their kids
  And Simmons was a grateful cuss
  He said, Doc's been like one of the family
  So, you can let him sleep with us
  
  Old Doc should have had a funeral
  Fine enough for a king
  It's a ghastly joke that our town was broke
  And no one could give a thing
  'Cept Jones, the undertaker
  He did mighty well
  Donatin' an old iron casket
  That he'd never been able to sell
  
  And the funeral procession, it wasn't much
  For grace and pomp and style
  But those wagon loads of mourners
  They stretched out for more than a mile
  And we breathed a prayer as we laid him there
  To rest beneath the sod
  This man who'd earned the right
  To be on speaking terms with God
  
  His grave was covered with flowers
  But not from the floral shops
  Just roses and things from folks' garden
  And one or two dandelion pots
  For the depression had hit our little town hard
  And each man carried a load
  So some just picked the wildflowers
  As they passed along the road
  
  We wanted to give him a monument
  Kinda figured we owed him one
  'Cause he'd made our town a better place
  For all the good he'd done
  But monuments cost money
  So, we did the best we could
  And on his grave we gently placed
  A monument - of wood
  
  We pulled up that old hitchin' post
  Where Doc had nailed his sign
  And we painted it white and to all of us
  It certainly did look fine
  Now the rains and snow has washed away
  Our white trimmings of paint
  And there ain't nothin' left but Doc's own sign
  And that is gettin' faint
  
  Still, when southern breezes and flickering stars
  Caress our sleeping town
  And the pale moon shines through Kentucky pines
  On the grave of Old Doc Brown
  You can still see that old hitchin' post
  As if an answer to our prayers
  Mutely telling the whole wide world
  Doc Brown has moved up stairs