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Ol' Red (Rogers Kenny)

Well I caught my wife with another man, and it cost me 99 on a prison farm in Georgia, close to the Florida line. Well I've been here for twelve long years, I finally made the warden my friend. And so he sentenced me to a life of ease takin' care of Old Red. Now old Red, he's the damdest dog that I've ever seen. Got a nose that can smell a two-day trail, he's a four-legged tracking machine. You can consider yourself mighty lucky to get past the gators and the quicksand fence. But all these years that I've been here and nobody got past Red. And the warden sang, "Come on somebody, why don't you run? Old Red's itching to have a little fun. Get my lantern, get my gun. Red will have a treat for the morning come." Well I paid off the guard, and I slipped out a letter to my cousin up in Tennessee. Oh, and he brought down a blue-tick hound, she was pretty as she could be. Well, they pinned her up in the swampland, about a mile just south of the gate. When I'd take old Red for his evening run, I'd just drop him off and wait. And the warden sang, "Come on somebody, Why don't you run? Old Red's itching to have a little fun. Get my lantern, Get my gun. Red will have a treat for the morning come." Well old Red he got real used to seeing his lady every night. And so I kept him away for three or four days, and waited til the time got right. Well, I made my run with the evening sun, and I smiled when I let old Red out. Cause I was headed north to Tennessee, and old Red was headed south. And the warden sang, "Come on somebody, why don't you run? Old Red's itching to have a little fun. Get my lantern, get my gun. Red will have treat for the morning come." Now there's red-haired blue ticks all in the south. Love got me in here, and love got me out...*