|
|
| A | | Back about eighteen and twenty-five |
|
| G | I | left Tennessee very much alive |
|
| A | I never | would’ve made it through the Arkansas mud |
|
| E | A | If I hadn’t been riding on the | Tennessee | Stud |
|
|
| A | Had | some trouble with my sweetheart’s Pa |
|
|
| G | One | of her brothers was a bad outlaw |
|
| A | I | wrote a letter to my Uncle Fudd |
|
| E | A | And I rode away on the | Tennessee | Stud |
|
|
|
| | A | G | A | | The | Tennessee Stud was | long and | lean |
|
| | D | C | E | | The | color of the sun and his | eyes were | green |
|
| | A | | He | had the nerve and he had the blood |
|
| | E | A | | There never was a horse like | Tennessee | Stud |
|
|
Drifted on down into no man’s land |
|
Across the river called the Rio Grande |
|
Raced my horse with the Spaniard’s foe |
|
Til I got me a skin full of silver and gold |
|
|
Me and the gambler, we couldn’t agree |
|
We got in a fight over Tennessee |
|
Pulled our guns and he fell with a thud |
|
And I rode away on a Tennessee Stud |
|
|
|
|
I rode right back across Arkansas |
|
I whupped her brother and I whupped her Pa |
|
I found that girl with the golden hair |
|
She was riding on a Tennessee Mare |
|
|
Pretty little baby on the cabin floor |
|
Little horse colt playing round the door |
|
I loved the girl with the golden hair |
|
And the Tennessee Stud loves the Tennessee Mare |
|
|