歌曲 | Alice in the Bacon Box |
歌手 | Lucy Ward |
专辑 | Adelphi Has to Fly |
下载 | Image LRC TXT |
My name once was Alice Grace, | |
The flower of my town | |
All the boys used to turn and stare | |
They still do that now | |
I once had a lover | |
and he was strong and kind and true | |
or at least I thought he was | |
but he were all I knew | |
(he were all I knew) | |
My name once were Alice Grace | |
the fallen lady in my town | |
the boys well they turned away | |
though they’re blummin staring now. | |
And when me mother died | |
it broke me father’s heart in two | |
within ten days, he’d passed away | |
and they were all I knew | |
(they were all I knew) | |
My name once were Alice Grace | |
the beggar in my town | |
I couldn’t pay me rent, and so I got turned out | |
But this kind hearted butcher he wouldn’t see me on the street | |
he gave me a bacon box and a scrap of food to eat | |
(a scrap of food to eat) | |
Old Alice in the bacon box | |
That’s what they called me | |
lived off the kindness of strangers in my box upon the green | |
and though the workhouse in Shardlow | |
tried to take me for its own | |
I’d pull out of my shoe a bright penny and two | |
and they’d have to send me home. | |
(they’d have to send me home) | |
(have to send me home) | |
(have to send me home) | |
One day the copper caught me, | |
with no thrupence to my name | |
and he carted me off to Shardlow | |
I ne’er saw me box again. |
My name once was Alice Grace, | |
The flower of my town | |
All the boys used to turn and stare | |
They still do that now | |
I once had a lover | |
and he was strong and kind and true | |
or at least I thought he was | |
but he were all I knew | |
he were all I knew | |
My name once were Alice Grace | |
the fallen lady in my town | |
the boys well they turned away | |
though they' re blummin staring now. | |
And when me mother died | |
it broke me father' s heart in two | |
within ten days, he' d passed away | |
and they were all I knew | |
they were all I knew | |
My name once were Alice Grace | |
the beggar in my town | |
I couldn' t pay me rent, and so I got turned out | |
But this kind hearted butcher he wouldn' t see me on the street | |
he gave me a bacon box and a scrap of food to eat | |
a scrap of food to eat | |
Old Alice in the bacon box | |
That' s what they called me | |
lived off the kindness of strangers in my box upon the green | |
and though the workhouse in Shardlow | |
tried to take me for its own | |
I' d pull out of my shoe a bright penny and two | |
and they' d have to send me home. | |
they' d have to send me home | |
have to send me home | |
have to send me home | |
One day the copper caught me, | |
with no thrupence to my name | |
and he carted me off to Shardlow | |
I ne' er saw me box again. |
My name once was Alice Grace, | |
The flower of my town | |
All the boys used to turn and stare | |
They still do that now | |
I once had a lover | |
and he was strong and kind and true | |
or at least I thought he was | |
but he were all I knew | |
he were all I knew | |
My name once were Alice Grace | |
the fallen lady in my town | |
the boys well they turned away | |
though they' re blummin staring now. | |
And when me mother died | |
it broke me father' s heart in two | |
within ten days, he' d passed away | |
and they were all I knew | |
they were all I knew | |
My name once were Alice Grace | |
the beggar in my town | |
I couldn' t pay me rent, and so I got turned out | |
But this kind hearted butcher he wouldn' t see me on the street | |
he gave me a bacon box and a scrap of food to eat | |
a scrap of food to eat | |
Old Alice in the bacon box | |
That' s what they called me | |
lived off the kindness of strangers in my box upon the green | |
and though the workhouse in Shardlow | |
tried to take me for its own | |
I' d pull out of my shoe a bright penny and two | |
and they' d have to send me home. | |
they' d have to send me home | |
have to send me home | |
have to send me home | |
One day the copper caught me, | |
with no thrupence to my name | |
and he carted me off to Shardlow | |
I ne' er saw me box again. |