Lyrics The Luck of the Irish - Uncle Bard & the Dirty Bastards
Me
grandaunt
was
a
poor
maid
Grew
up
in
Kildare
She
used
to
drink
poitín
To
make
her
life
bare
Her
husband,
a
fisherman,
Lived
by
the
sea
He
sailed
out
from
New
Ross
But
never
came
home
Six
childer
raised
up
In
a
house
old
and
damp
They
started
to
work
At
13
years
old
Two
died
for
the
famine
And
one
for
the
cold
The
oldest,
the
rebel
Was
sent
to
Ceylon
So
tell
me
oh
dear
Where's
our
pot
of
gold?
I
stumbled
'till
West
Clare
To
find
there
was
none
At
the
top
of
me
lungs,
Leaned
out
over
the
cliffs
I
shouted
ye
oversea
"Lucky
me
ae!"
Someone
crossed
the
sea
To
work
under
the
ground
A
coal
mine
was
the
lodge
Where
Uncle
Johnny
died
While
Tommy
was
sent
On
a
far
Turkish
strand
His
young
body
lies
now
Down
there
in
the
sand
Then
came
the
Easter
The
Rising,
the
war
The
struggle
for
being
A
nation
once
more
James
Connolly
shot
While
tied
on
a
seat
The
Black
and
Tans
marching
Out
there
in
our
streets
So
tell
me
oh
dear
Where's
our
pot
of
gold?
I
stumbled
'till
West
Clare
To
find
there
was
none
At
the
top
of
me
lungs,
Leaned
out
over
the
cliffs
I
shouted
ye
oversea
"Lucky
me
ae!"
So
tell
me
oh
dear
Where's
our
pot
of
gold?
I
stumbled
'till
West
Clare
To
find
there
was
none
At
the
top
of
me
lungs,
Leaned
out
over
the
cliffs
I
shouted
ye
oversea
"Lucky
me
ae!"
1 Handmade
2 Gipsy Geezers
3 Too Old to Stop Now
4 Stay Untamed!
5 The Man Who Spoke to the Earth
6 The Donegal Lass / The Butler of Glen Avenue / Tell Me About You
7 The Ferryman
8 Anger (The Void That Stops the Wind)
9 The Clarenbridge Fair
10 The Streets of Dublin
11 Lads from the Countryside
12 The Luck of the Irish
13 Plastic Paddy's Day
14 Rust
15 The Flat Above My Pub
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