[ti:] [ar:] [al:] [00:00.89]Amos Moses [00:01.26] [00:05.19]Yeah here comes Amos. [00:09.60]Now Amos Moses was a Cajun [00:12.08]He lived by himself in the swamp [00:14.25]He hunted alligator for a living [00:16.39]He'd just knock them in the head with a stump [00:19.06]The Louisiana law gonna get you Amos [00:23.52]It ain't legal hunting alligator down in the swamp boy [00:25.75] [00:28.61]Now everyone blamed his old man [00:30.52]For making him mean as a snake [00:32.70]When Amos Moses was a boy [00:34.25]His daddy would use him for alligator bait [00:37.10]Tie a rope around his neck and throw him in the swamp [00:41.90]Alligator man in the Louisiana bayou [00:46.13]About forty-five minutes south of Tippitoe Louisiana [00:50.65]Lived a man called Dr. Mills South and his pretty wife Hannah [00:55.19]They raised up a son who could eat his weight in groceries [00:59.84]Named him after a man of the cloth [01:02.72]Called him Amos Moses [01:03.93] [01:08.62]Now the folks around south Louisiana [01:11.09]Said Amos was a hell of a man [01:13.37]He could trap the biggest meanest alligator [01:15.93]And he'd just use one hand [01:17.87]That's all he got left cause an alligator bit it [01:22.50]Left arm gone clear up to the elbow [01:24.83] [01:27.00]Well the sheriff caught wind that Amos was up in the swamp [01:29.09]Trading alligator skins [01:31.49]So he snuck in the swamp gonna get the boy [01:33.65]But he never came out [01:36.01]Well I wonder where the Louisiana sheriff went to [01:40.38]Well you can sure get lost in the Louisiana bayou [01:45.04]About forty-five minutes south of Tippitoe Louisiana [01:49.51]Lived a cat named Dr. Mills South and his pretty wife Hannah [01:54.03]They raised up a son who could eat his weight in groceries [01:58.69]Named him after a man of the cloth [02:01.21]Called him Amos Moses [02:02.56] [02:03.41]I know son [02:05.54]Make it count son [02:07.47]About forty-five minutes south of Tippitoe Louisiana...