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POOR BUTTERFLY cotaenrutoe i916 41 Db C7 B7! Bb ‘Bb-7 Eb79 AAT Ab6 Poor but-ter-~ fly ‘neath the blos-soms wait - ing, poor But- ter - The moon and know that she is faith - ful, Tm sure he G79 CHT 3-7 FT Bb7 7 fy, for she loved him so. The fro-ments pass in-to hours, the hours come to me bye and E F- F7 BIT Bb D9 C7B 7A pass in-to years, and as she smilesthruhertears, she mur-murs low. ‘The moon and 2F9 Bb7 Bb7s Abnst Ab Db7#0 bye. But if he don't come back, then I nev-er sigh or cry, c7 Bb7 Eb7I9 Ab6 1 jt mus die Poor but-ter- fly. OLD FOLKS Robieon/HM1 1838 D715 G79 C-7 B-7 Bh7 AT AbaT Db G7 C7 3 ' A Ev-'ry-one knows him as old folks, like the sea-sons he'll come andhe’ll go. just as leav-ing his spoon in his cof- fee, puts his nap-kin up un- der his chin and that. quite un-der-stand a-bout old folks, did he fight for the blue or the grey? For he's F-7 Bb7 Eba7 cm =f! C7 F7 F-7 Bb7 2 a os free asa bird and as good as_his word, that’s Why ev- 'ry- bo- dy loves him so. Always yel-low cob pipe, i's so mellow it's ripe, but so dip-lo- ma-tic and so dem-o- cra - tic, e FA pes LB) harms Bh7 Bb7 aber youneed-n’t be. a-shamed of him. ‘we al-ways let him have his way. Db7 Bba7 EDT AbsT D9 C=7. F7 F+7 BHT In the eve "ning af-ter sup-per, what stor-ies he would tell, how he held the speechat Get-tys-burg for Lin-coln that 43Y, I know that one sowell Don't 0. al 2nd End.

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