Henry Clark by Seth Lakeman

Henry Clark Lyrics

edit | print 
Worthy of a friendship lying underneath a stone,
He was a proper master, all of a ship his own.
For houses and great land many gold in store,
I know he'd spent the whole lot and would again I'm sure.

The blackbirds are singing,
At the breaking of the day,
When poor old Henry Clark,
Left and went away.

For twenty years he scarcely slept upon a proper bed.
Sleepin' with that faint heart inside a weary head,
In the weeks he'd gaze out over Plymouth bay,
To show off all those great girls when the boys are back one day.

Chorus

Now his days are over for he was taken ill.
Carried to a workhouse all against his will,
But being just a mortal he lived a life quite tired,
He only lived for one month then his world expired.

Chorus
Love this song? Put this box on your blog!
Lyrics

Henry Clark Lyrics

Worthy of a friendship lying underneath a stone,
He was a proper master, all of a ship his own.
For houses and great land many gold in store,
I know he'd spent the whole lot and would again I'm sure.

The blackbirds are singing,
At the breaking of the day,
When poor old Henry Clark,
Left and went away.

full lyrics

more lyrics

Paste this code into your blog:
This is where you edit and then post corrections:
Artist:
Title:
Songwriter:
Your name (just to give you credit, optional):
Email (to let you know, when it's posted):
Enter the code exactly as it appears:
   
1. Click to add a song to your playlist.

2. Search and add more songs.

3. Save the playlist and share it anywhere.

PlayAdd
Seth Lakeman - Henry Clark (audio)