paroles de chanson Irish Rover - FIDDLER'S GREEN
On
the
fourth
of
July
eighteen
hundred
and
six
We
set
sail
from
the
sweet
cove
of
Cork
We
were
sailing
away
with
a
cargo
of
bricks
For
the
grad
city
hall
in
New
York
'T
was
a
wonderful
craft,
she
was
rigged
fore-and-aft
And
oh,
how
the
wild
winds
drove
her
She
got
several
blasts,
she
had
twenty-seven
masts
And
they
called
her
the
Irish
Rover
We
had
one
million
bales
of
the
best
Sligo
rags
We
had
two
million
barrels
of
rum
We
had
three
million
sides
of
old
blind
horses
hides
We
had
four
million
barrels
of
bones
We
had
five
million
hogs,
six
million
dogs
Seven
million
barrels
of
porter
We
had
eight
million
bails
of
old
nanny
goats'
tails
In
the
hold
of
the
Irish
Rover
There
was
awl
Mickey
Coote
who
playes
hard
on
his
flute
When
the
ladies
lined
up
for
his
set
He
would
tootle
with
skill
for
each
sparkling
quadrille
Though
the
dancers
were
fluther'd
and
bet
With
his
sparse
witty
talk
he
was
cock
of
the
walk
As
he
rolled
the
dames
under
and
over
And
they
knew
at
a
glance
when
he
took
up
his
stance
They
sailed
in
the
Irish
Rover
There
was
Barney
McGee
from
the
banks
of
the
Lee
There
was
Hogan
from
County
Tyrone
There
was
Jimmy
McGurk
who
was
scarred
stiff
of
work
And
a
man
from
Westmeath
called
Malone
There
was
Slugger
O'Toole
who
was
drunk
as
a
rule
And
fighthing
Bill
Tracey
from
Dover
And
your
man
Mick
McCann
from
the
banks
of
the
Bann
Was
the
skipper
of
the
Irish
Rover
We
had
sailed
seven
years
when
the
measles
broke
out
And
the
ship
lost
it's
way
in
a
fog
And
that
whale
of
the
crew
was
reduced
down
to
two
Just
myself
and
the
captain's
old
dog
Then
the
ship
struck
a
rock,
oh
Lord,
what
a
shock!
The
bulkhead
was
turned
right
over
Turned
nine
times
around,
and
the
poor
dog
was
drowned
I'm
the
last
of
the
Irish
Rover
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