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Wanted Man: The Very Best of Johnny Cash
01. I Walk the Line
02. Folsom Prison Blues
03. Give My Love to Rose
04. Guess Things Happen That Way
05. Ballad of a Teenage Queen
06. I Still Miss Someone
07. A Boy Named Sue
08. Don't Take Your Guns to Town
09. San Quentin
10. Ring of Fire
11. Orange Blossom Special
12. No Expectations
13. Man in Black
14. Girl From the North Country
15. It Ain't Me Babe
16. Wanted Man
17. (Ghost) Riders in the Sky
18. Highway Patrolman
19. The Long Black Veil
20. Rockabilly Blues (Texas 1955)
21. Hidden Shame
22. Let Him Roll
23. The Night Hank Williams Came to Town
24. The Wanderer
Let him roll, boys, let him roll
I bet he's gone to Dallas, rest his soul

Now he was a wino, tried and true
Done about everything there is to do
He worked on freighters, he worked in bars
He worked on farms, and he worked on cars

Now it was white port whine, that put that look in his eye
That grown men get when they need to cry
And we sat down on the curb to rest
And his head just fell down on his chest

He said, "Every single day it gets
Just a little bit harder to handle and yet..."
Then he lost the thread and his mind got cluttered
The words just rolled off down the gutter

He was a elevator man in a cheap hotel
In exchange for the rent on a one room cell
And he's years old before his time
No thanks to the world, and the white port wine

So he said, "Son", he always called me son
He said, "Life for you has just begun"
And then he told me the story that I heard before
How he fell in love with a Dallas whore

He could cut through the years to the very night
That it all ended in a whore house fight
And she turned his last proposal down
In favor of being a girl about town

Now it's been 17 years right in line
And he ain't been straight none of the time
It's too many years of fightin' the weather
And too many nights of not being together

So he died

Let him roll, boys, let him roll
I bet he's gone to Dallas, rest his soul
Let him roll, boys, let him roll
He always thought that Heaven
Was just a Dallas whore

When they went through his personal affects
In among the stubs from the welfare checks
Was a crumblin' picture of a girl in a door
An address in Dallas, and nothin' more

Well, the welfare people provided the priest
And a couple from the mission down the street
Sang Amazing Grace, and nobody cried
'Cept some lady in black way off to the side

We all left and she's standin' there
The black veil coverin' her silver hair
And ole one-eyed John said her name was Alice
She used to be a whore in Dallas

Let him roll (let him roll), boys, let him roll
I bet he's gone to Dallas, rest his soul
Let him roll (let him roll), boys, let him roll
He always thought that Heaven
Was just a Dallas whore

Let him roll, boys, let him roll
Let him roll, boys, let him-