I've seen the bright lights of Memphis
And the Commodore Hotel
And underneath a street lamp I met a Southern belle
Oh she took me to the river, where she cast her spell
And in that Southern moonlight, she sang this song so well
If you'll be my Dixie chicken, I'll be your Tennessee lamb
And we can walk together down in Dixieland
Down in Dixieland
We made all the hot spots. My money flowed like wine
Then the low down southern whiskey, yeah, began to fog my mind
And I don't remember church bells, or the money I put down
On the white picket fence and boardwalk on the house at the end of town
But boy do I remember the strain of her refrain
And the nights we spent together, and the way she called my name
If you'll be my Dixie chicken, I'll be your Tennessee lamb
And we can walk together down in Dixieland
Down in Dixieland
Many years since she ran away
Yes those guitar players sure could play
He always handy with a song
She always liked to sing along
But then one night in the lobby of the Commodore Hotel
I chanced to meet a bartender who said he knew her well
And as he handed me a drink he began to hum a song
And all the boys there, at the bar, began to sing along
If you'll be my Dixie chicken, I'll be your Tennessee lamb
And we can walk together down in Dixieland
Down in Dixieland
Whoa in Dixieland
Down in Dixieland
(Oh man I'd like to be deep down in the land of cotton)
Down in Dixieland
Writer(s): Lowell T George, Martin Fyodor Kibbee
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