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94 CAST YOUR FATE TO THE WIND 1< cusrata/werver Cc F Cc Bb A — month of nights, & year of days Oc. - to-ber drifting in-to Mays, I ‘iff my course a - long the breeze, won't sail up-wind on me-mo- ries,” the There never was, there could-n't be, a place in time for men like me, who'd So now I'm old, 'm wise. I'm sman, I'm just a man with half a beat, 'T c F Bb c F Bb set_my sail when the tide comes in aifd I just cast my fate to the wind. emp-ty sky is my best friend, and rink the dark and laugh at day,’ and Jet their wild-est dreams blow a- way. ‘won-der how it’ might have been, had I not cast my fate to the wind. Bb FB ‘c7 Bb &7 Bb FC F Bb F Bb Cc oF time has such a way of chang-ing 2 man through-out the years And now I'm re - ar Bb F Bb Cc F D.C. alana vere Tang-ing——_ my _— life through all my —tears___ a- lone. ‘There's STRANGER ON THE SHORE ‘Acker Ble F F7 Bb BR F D7 F G-7 C7 Here 1 stand, watch-ing thevtde go ou so all a-lone and watched your ‘ship—___ as it sailed out to sea—___ tak- ing all my Why ‘oh why, must I goon like this?- shall I just be a “G9 G7 c7 2 F/A FT b cz F F7 blue, just _dream-ing dreams of you. I, dreams and _—tak-ing all of me. Tone - ly stranger on the shore?. G7 c7 F F7 Bb F the wail- ing of the wind the A> G7 G-7 c7 of waves, The sigh - ing Bb ‘Dale Ena i) tears in my eyes bum plead - ing, my love, re- tum.

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