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| Come | round you rovin | gamblers theres a s | tory I will t | ell |
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| A | bout the greatest | gambler you | all should know him | well |
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| His | name was Willie O' | ?Connelly and he | gambled all his | life |
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| He?s had | 27 children yet he?s | never had a | wife |
| C | F | C | F | C | F | C | F | |
| And it?s | ri | de | W | illie ride, | ro | ll | W | illie roll, |
| F C F C F C F hold C |
| Where ever you?re a gamblin? now nobody knows |
| Well he gambled in the white house and in the railroad yards |
| Where ever there was people there was Willie and his cards |
| He had the reputation as the gamblinest man around |
| Wives would keep their husbands home when Willie came town |
| Sailin down the Mississippi to a town called New Orleans |
| They?re still talkin about that card game on that Jackson Queen |
| ?I?ve come to win some money,? gamblin Willie says |
| When the game finally ended up, the whole darn boat was his |
| Up in the Rocky Mountains in a town called Cripple Creek |
| There was an old poker game lasted about a week |
| 900 miners had laid their money down |
| When Willie finally left the room he owned the whole darn town. |
| (verse with harp) |
| Well Willie had a heart of gold and this I know is true |
| He supported all his children and all their mothers too |
| He wore no wings and fancy things that other gamblers wore |
| He spread his money far and wide to help the sick and poor |
| When you played your cards with Willie you never really knew |
| Whether he was bluffin or whether he was true |
| He won a fortune from a man who folded in his chair |
| The man he left a diamond flush Willie didn?t even have a pair |
| It was late one evening during a poker game |
| A man lost all his money said Willie was to blame |
| He shot poor Willie through the head which was a tragic fate |
| Willie?s cards fell on the floor they were aces backed with eights |
| So all you ramblin gamblers where ever you might be |
| The moral of the story is very plain to see |
| Make your money while you can before you have to stop |
| Cause when you pull that dead man?s hand your gamblin days are up. |
| Boogieboy@aol.com |