Gambler's Blues (1929) - The Hokum Boys

Gambler's Blues (1929) - The Hokum Boys

Let Her Go, God Bless Her / Dying Crapshooter's Blues / Gambler's Blues / St. James' Infirmary Blues (Roud No. 2) - Early version of "St. James' Infirmary Blues". Here's the 2nd part of the song:    • Gambler's Blues No. 2 (1929) - The Hokum Boys   One of the rare texts to include the verse about being shot down by a cannonball in the middle of the ocean. Here's an early text which makes the cannonball confusion clear, it is actually "gambling house brawl" in this version. https://iwentdowntostjamesinfirmary.b... This text was sent by Terence McKay to Robert Winslow Gordon in a letter dated April 5, 1926 Old Time Gambler's Song I dreamed I went down to St. James Infirmary Thought I saw my baby lying there; Laid out on a clean white table, So pale and yet so fair. If she's gone, let her go, God bless her, For she's mine wherever she may be; You may search this wide world over You'll never find another pal such as she I may die out on the ocean Be shot down in a gambling house brawl; But if you follow me to the end of my story You'll find a blonde was the cause of it all When I die just bury me in a box back suit, Blue shirt, roller hat, pair of shoes with toes so tall; Put whiskey in my coffin, deck of cards in my hand; Don't let them weep and wail, don't let them moan at all. Put marihuana in my coffin, Smoke it as you carry me along; Take even rolling crap shooters for pall bearers, Coke sniffers to sing my funeral song. Put a twenty dollar gold piece on my watch charm So the boys'll all know I'm standing pat; Put ice on my feet, for in that place where I'm going I won't even be cool with that. Just carve it on my tombstone In letters bold and black, "Here lies an old time gambler, Pray God won't you please bring him back!" From "Songs of the Cowboys" (1966) by Austin E. and Alta S. Fife. The references to marihuana and coke sniffers are interesting, looks like this bit was tamed down for the later commercially recorded versions.