(capo 2nd fret)
(verse 1)
G
She would meet me in the mornin' on my way down to the river,
Am - D
Waiting patient by the China Berry tree;
Am D Am D
With her feet already dusty from the pathway to the levee,
Am D D
And her little blue jeans rolled up to her knees.
G Em7 G Em7
I'd pay her no attention as she tagged along beside me,
G G7 C
Trying hard to copy ev'rything I did;
Am D Am D
But I couldn't keep from smiling when I'd hear somebody saying:
Am D G
"Look a-yonder; there goes Jody and the kid."
(verse 2)
After we grew older, we could still be seen together,
As we walked along the levee holding hands;
For as surely as the seasons, she was changin' to a woman,
And I'd lived enough to call myself a man.
And she often lay beside me, in the coolness of the evening,
'Til the morning sun was shining on my bed;
And at times, when she was sleeping,
I would smile when I'd remember,
How they used to call us "Jody and the kid."
(verse 3)
G Em7 G Em7
Now, the world's a little older, and the years have changed the river,
G Em7 Am - D
'Cos there's houses where they didn't used to be;
Am D Am D
And on Sundays I go walking down the pathway to the levee,
Am D G
With another little girl who follows me.
G Em7 G Em7
And it makes the old folks smile to see her tag along beside me,
G G7 C
Doing little things the way her Mamma did.
Am D Am D
But it gets a little lonesome, when I hear somebody saying:
Am D G
"Look yonder; there goes Jody and the kid."