Philip Marshall Cates was born in Carolina Went to school in England Philip and Samantha married on his farm Before the harvest season He was schemin' His worshipped father died a Great War hero At night he'd lie in bed and clutch His silver stars and eagles He was schemin' Back abroad in London Philip Marshall Cates Had met an old explorer Who'd climbed the Ural Mountains, crossed Sahara Dove the oceans, spoke of more Oh, he spoke of more So one night Philip abandoned poor Samantha Future Smokey Mountain old maid And as he dark departed, son Lysander Joined his father as a stowaway He spoke of more But tonight, don't cry For Samantha, mother and bride As she holds a black and white photograph That fades away She still works the farm And she remembers her baby in her arms The babe that left her barren And the man that drove her early grey And they all take respite in The thought of coming home one day Philip and Lysander carried south To work for merchants out of Quito Son translated, father wore a gun And fended off banditos He grew weak though Then in eighteen years they worked Every job from here to Argentina Every woman a distortion of The last time they had seen her He grew weak though But tonight, don't cry For Samantha, mother and bride As she holds a black and white photograph That fades away She still works the farm And she remembers her baby in her arms The babe that left her barren And the man that drove her early grey And they all take respite in The thought of coming home one day Old Lysander Cates spent over thirty months In travel north to Raleigh Gasping when he saw Samantha Bed-ridden, rheumatized and gnarly He said "I'm sorry "It's been seven years since father was gunned down "By gauchos out to rob our cocaine "And when I got out of jail for killing every last one "I started home again "Oh, Mother I'm sorry" Old Samantha Cates was buried in The shadow of the church bell tower And when he took his life Lysander's body Landed there amongst her flowers But tonight, don't cry For Samantha, mother and bride As she holds a black and white photograph That's faded away She still works the farm And her baby has outgrown her arms The fields are never barren and The men come in for supper after a long hard day And they all take respite in the thought of coming home