| Song | Two Hangmen |
| Artist | Mason Proffit |
| Album | Wanted! Mason Proffitt |
| Download | Image LRC TXT |
| 作词 : Talbot, Talbot | |
| As I rode into Tombstone on my horse whose name was Mac | |
| I saw what I relate to you goin' on behind my back | |
| It seems the folks were up in arms a man now had to die | |
| For believin' things that didn't fit the laws they'd set aside | |
| The man's name was I'm a freak the best that I could see | |
| He was an executioner a hangman just like me | |
| I guess that he'd seen loopholes from workin' with his rope | |
| He'd hung the wrong man many times so now he turned to hope | |
| He'd talk to all the people from his scaffold in the square | |
| He told them of the things he found; | |
| But they didn't seem to care | |
| He said the laws were obsolete, a change they should demand | |
| But the people only walked away, he couldn't understand | |
| The Marshall's name was Uncle Sam he said he'd right this wrong | |
| He'd make the hangman shut his mouth if it took him all year long | |
| He finally arrested Freak and then he sent for me | |
| To hang a fellow hangman from a fellow hangman's tree | |
| It didn't take them long to try him in their court of law | |
| He was guilty then of thinking a crime much worse than all | |
| They sentenced him to die so his seed of thought can't spread | |
| And infect the little children; that's what the law had said | |
| So the hangin' day came 'round and he walked up to the noose | |
| I pulled the lever but before he fell I cut him loose | |
| They called it all conspiracy and that I had to die | |
| So to close our mouths and kill our minds they hung us side by side | |
| And now there's two hangmen hangin' from a tree | |
| That don't bother me at all | |
| Two hangmen hangin' from a tree | |
| That don't bother me at all |
| zuo ci : Talbot, Talbot | |
| As I rode into Tombstone on my horse whose name was Mac | |
| I saw what I relate to you goin' on behind my back | |
| It seems the folks were up in arms a man now had to die | |
| For believin' things that didn' t fit the laws they' d set aside | |
| The man' s name was I' m a freak the best that I could see | |
| He was an executioner a hangman just like me | |
| I guess that he' d seen loopholes from workin' with his rope | |
| He' d hung the wrong man many times so now he turned to hope | |
| He' d talk to all the people from his scaffold in the square | |
| He told them of the things he found | |
| But they didn' t seem to care | |
| He said the laws were obsolete, a change they should demand | |
| But the people only walked away, he couldn' t understand | |
| The Marshall' s name was Uncle Sam he said he' d right this wrong | |
| He' d make the hangman shut his mouth if it took him all year long | |
| He finally arrested Freak and then he sent for me | |
| To hang a fellow hangman from a fellow hangman' s tree | |
| It didn' t take them long to try him in their court of law | |
| He was guilty then of thinking a crime much worse than all | |
| They sentenced him to die so his seed of thought can' t spread | |
| And infect the little children that' s what the law had said | |
| So the hangin' day came ' round and he walked up to the noose | |
| I pulled the lever but before he fell I cut him loose | |
| They called it all conspiracy and that I had to die | |
| So to close our mouths and kill our minds they hung us side by side | |
| And now there' s two hangmen hangin' from a tree | |
| That don' t bother me at all | |
| Two hangmen hangin' from a tree | |
| That don' t bother me at all |
| zuò cí : Talbot, Talbot | |
| As I rode into Tombstone on my horse whose name was Mac | |
| I saw what I relate to you goin' on behind my back | |
| It seems the folks were up in arms a man now had to die | |
| For believin' things that didn' t fit the laws they' d set aside | |
| The man' s name was I' m a freak the best that I could see | |
| He was an executioner a hangman just like me | |
| I guess that he' d seen loopholes from workin' with his rope | |
| He' d hung the wrong man many times so now he turned to hope | |
| He' d talk to all the people from his scaffold in the square | |
| He told them of the things he found | |
| But they didn' t seem to care | |
| He said the laws were obsolete, a change they should demand | |
| But the people only walked away, he couldn' t understand | |
| The Marshall' s name was Uncle Sam he said he' d right this wrong | |
| He' d make the hangman shut his mouth if it took him all year long | |
| He finally arrested Freak and then he sent for me | |
| To hang a fellow hangman from a fellow hangman' s tree | |
| It didn' t take them long to try him in their court of law | |
| He was guilty then of thinking a crime much worse than all | |
| They sentenced him to die so his seed of thought can' t spread | |
| And infect the little children that' s what the law had said | |
| So the hangin' day came ' round and he walked up to the noose | |
| I pulled the lever but before he fell I cut him loose | |
| They called it all conspiracy and that I had to die | |
| So to close our mouths and kill our minds they hung us side by side | |
| And now there' s two hangmen hangin' from a tree | |
| That don' t bother me at all | |
| Two hangmen hangin' from a tree | |
| That don' t bother me at all |