Tono: C
Introducción: C Em D G C Em D
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If you're down by Queen and Britain streets
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You'll find Stonecutter's Lane
The house that my Grandfather built
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Where I was born and raised
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My Granddad was a mason
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And my father in his time
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When my time came I signed as an apprentice lad
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The early Nineteen Hundreds
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Were a rich, fat afternoon
We were cutting stone like demons
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No work was done too soon
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We were hired out on seven jobs
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And so to take the slack
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We put out advertisements for apprentice lads
You'd never find a better crew
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They knew what work was
Cornices and lintels
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They laid stone like they were gods
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To hear the hammers ring out
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You'd think it was a song
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In August, Nineteen Fourteen
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In the sultry summer heat
They took a vote in Ottawa
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The drums began to beat
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Honour, glory, us or them
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The story doesn't change
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To a man they all enlisted, my apprentice lads
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I didn't say that I agreed
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'Cause I knew what war was
It was worker killing worker
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For some politician's cause
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And off to battle they all marched
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They gassed them at Cambrai
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The dogs of war had done for my apprentice lads
In Nineteen Sixteen fire broke out
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Parliament was razed
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The call went out for masons
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To rebuild and to re-lay
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It was the contract of a lifetime
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The house upon the hill
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So they came out from Vancouver
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They came down from Montreal
Master masons everyone
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They were answering their call
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There was no man under thirty
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No man whose work I didn't know
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The fields of France had swallowed the apprentice lads
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It's Nineteen Twenty-One now
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I'm standing at the peak
About to cap the Peace Tower off
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There's no one here can speak
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The mortar for that stone we mixed
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With clay from Flanders' Fields
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Laid it in it's place for those apprentice lads
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Yeah, we laid it in it's place for those apprentice lads