The Hateful Eight Quote

[singing Jim Jones at Botany Bay as she keeps tabs on John Ruth] Daisy Domergue: Listen for a moment, lads, and hear me tell m' tale / How o'er the sea from England shore, I was condemned to sail / The jury found me guilty, sir, and said the judge, said he / For life, Jim Jones, I sentence you across the stormy sea. Take my tip before you ship to join the iron gang / Don't be too gay in Botany Bay or else you'll surely hang / Or else you'll surely hang, says he, and after that, Jim Jones / High up... high up upon... high up upon the gallows tree, the crows will pick your bones. You'll have no chance for mischief there, remember what I say / They'll flog the poaching out of you out there in Botany Bay / Waves were high upon the sea, the winds a-pproacing gales / I'd rather drowned in misery than gone to New South Wales. The waves were high upon the seas when the pirates came along / The soldiers on the convict ship were full five hundred strong / They opened fire and somehow drove that pirate ship away / I'd rather joined that pirate ship than gone to Botany Bay. And one dark night, when everything is quiet in the town... [sees John Ruth and O.B. pouring cups of coffee]
Daisy Domergue: I'll kill you bastards one and all, I'll gun the floggers down/ Give them all a little shock, remember what I say / They'll yet regret they sent Jim Jones in chains to Botany Bay. [John Ruth walks up to her with coffee]
John 'The Hangman' Ruth: That's the one you like to sing in the stagecoach, huh?
Daisy Domergue: Yeah.
John 'The Hangman' Ruth: It's kind of pretty. Got another verse to it? [takes a sip of the coffee]
John 'The Hangman' Ruth: Well, go ahead. Sing it.
Daisy Domergue: [smiles coyly]Whatever you say, John. [returns to singing]
Daisy Domergue: Now day and night the irons clang and like poor galley slaves / Toil and toil and when we die must fill dishon

Movie: The Hateful Eight

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