Marty Robbins

Marty Robbins - Mr. Shorty guitar chord

(C) Nobody knew where he (Am) came from

(C) They only knew he came (Am) in

(C) Slowly he walked to the (Am) end of the bar

And he (Dm) ordered up one slug of (E7) gin

Well, I could (Am) see that he wasn't a (Dm) large man

I could (G) tell that he wasn't too (C) tall

I (E7) judged him to be (Am) 'bout five-foot three

And his (D) voice was a soft Texas (G) drawl.

Said he was needin' some wages

'Fore he could ride for the west

Said he could do most all kind of work

Said he could ride with the best;

There in his blue eyes was sadness

That comes from the need of a friend

And tho' he tried, he still couldn't hide

The loneliness there, deep within.

Said he would work thru the winter

For thirty a month and his board

I started to say where he might land a job

When a fellow came in thru the door;

And I could tell he was lookin' for trouble

From the way that he came stompin' in

He told me to leave Shorty there by himself

Come down and wait on a man.

The eyes of the little man narrowed

The smile disappeared from his face

Gone was the friendliness that I had seen

And a wild look of hate took its' place;

But the big one continued to mock him

And he told me that I'd better go

Find him a couple of glasses of milk

Then maybe Shorty would grow.

When the little man spoke, there was stillness

He made sure that everyone heard

Slowly he stepped away from the bar

And I still remember these words;

Oh! it's plain that you're lookin' for trouble

Trouble's what I try to shun

If that's what you want, then that's what you'll get

'Cause cowboy, we're both packin' guns.

His hand was already positioned

Feet wide apart on the floor

I hadn't noticed but there on his hip

Was a short-barreled Bass Forty-Four;

It was plain he was ready and waitin'

He leaned a bit forward and said

When you call me Shorty, say Mister, my friend

Maybe you'd rather be dead.

In the room was a terrible silence

As the big one stepped out on the floor

All drinkin' stopped and the tick of the clock

Said death would wait ten seconds more;

He cussed once or twice in a whisper

And he said with a snarl on his lips

Nobody's Mister to me, little man!

And he grabbed for the gun on his hips.

But the little man's hands was like lightning

The Bass Forty-Four was the same

The Forty-Four spoke and it sent lead and smoke

And seventeen inches of flame;

For the big one had never cleared leather

Beaten before he could start

A little round hole had appeared on his shirt

The bullet went clear thru his heart.

The little man stood there a moment

Then holstered the Bass Forty-Four

It's always this way so I never stay

Slowly he walked out the door;

Nobody knew where he came from

They won't forget he came by

They won't forget how a Forty-Four gun

One night made the difference in size.

(C) As for me, I'll remember the (Am) sadness

(C) Shown in the eyes of the (Am) man

(C) If we meet someday, you can (Am) bet I would say

That it's (D) me, Mister (D7) Shorty,

Your (G) frien-(F) ien-(G) end.

SOURCE:

Marty Robbins-In The Wild West, Part 5

Get this song at:  amazon.com sheetmusicplus.com

Share your thoughts

Comments

GillyGil1913@gmail.com
Sunday 28th of March 2021 21:23
Does anybody have Harmonica tabs for this song? If so, what Key, please?