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  • 作曲 : Eliza Gilkyson
    Jedidiah out in the snow
    Walkin' the frozen trenchlines
    Wet boots and his wool coat comin' apart at the seams.

    Rations of hard-baked dough,
    Handfuls of melting snow
    What else can a man live on but his dreams?

    Not twenty miles away,
    in the mansions of Philadelphia,
    Loyalists lay their money down on the king.
    We've provision enough for the day,
    but if victory were just for the wealthy
    Our noble cause wouldn't be worth the hardship we're suffering.
    Send the cloth for a good waistcoat,
    I dream of your hearth and the fields of oat.
    I awake to the drum and the trembling note of the fifer.

    May it please God in His great mercy,
    To shelter our friends and our family.
    I remain your son most faithfully,
    Jedidiah
    I have seen a man, who has seen a man
    who has heard the king,
    Tell of his intention our independence to declare.
    The peace will undoubtedly bring
    A great revolution in commerce;
    May it be our rightful fortune to come in for a share.
    My regards to a certain Miss Moore,
    I've stated my honorable intentions for her;
    That upon my return from this necessary war she'll be my wife.
    May it please God in His great mercy
    to restore the joys of domesticity.
    Salutations to the family,
    Jedidiah

    I rejoice that the cause we're engaged in
    is in the hands of an Almighty Sovereign;
    Who I doubt not is accomplishing the ends of His desire.
    My love to you and the fair Miss Moore;
    Spare me a bottle from the cellar store,
    and in my name let the contents pour,
    Jedidiah
  • 作曲 : Eliza Gilkyson
    Jedidiah out in the snow
    Walkin' the frozen trenchlines
    Wet boots and his wool coat comin' apart at the seams.

    Rations of hard-baked dough,
    Handfuls of melting snow
    What else can a man live on but his dreams?

    Not twenty miles away,
    in the mansions of Philadelphia,
    Loyalists lay their money down on the king.
    We've provision enough for the day,
    but if victory were just for the wealthy
    Our noble cause wouldn't be worth the hardship we're suffering.
    Send the cloth for a good waistcoat,
    I dream of your hearth and the fields of oat.
    I awake to the drum and the trembling note of the fifer.

    May it please God in His great mercy,
    To shelter our friends and our family.
    I remain your son most faithfully,
    Jedidiah
    I have seen a man, who has seen a man
    who has heard the king,
    Tell of his intention our independence to declare.
    The peace will undoubtedly bring
    A great revolution in commerce;
    May it be our rightful fortune to come in for a share.
    My regards to a certain Miss Moore,
    I've stated my honorable intentions for her;
    That upon my return from this necessary war she'll be my wife.
    May it please God in His great mercy
    to restore the joys of domesticity.
    Salutations to the family,
    Jedidiah

    I rejoice that the cause we're engaged in
    is in the hands of an Almighty Sovereign;
    Who I doubt not is accomplishing the ends of His desire.
    My love to you and the fair Miss Moore;
    Spare me a bottle from the cellar store,
    and in my name let the contents pour,
    Jedidiah