Текст песни If Ever You Go to Dublin Town - Ronnie Drew
If
you
ever
go
to
Dublin
town
In
a
hundred
years
or
so
Inquire
for
me
in
Baggot
street
And
what
I
was
like
to
know
O
he
was
the
queer
one
Fol
dol
the
di
do
He
was
a
queer
one
And
I
tell
you
My
great-grandmother
knew
him
well,
He
asked
her
to
come
and
call
On
him
in
his
flat
and
she
giggled
at
the
thought
Of
a
young
girl's
lovely
fall.
O
he
was
dangerous,
Fol
dol
the
di
do,
He
was
dangerous,
And
I
tell
you
On
Pembroke
Road
look
out
for
my
ghost,
Dishevelled
with
shoes
untied,
Playing
through
the
railings
with
little
children
Whose
children
have
long
since
died.
O
he
was
a
nice
man,
Fol
do
the
di
do,
He
was
a
nice
man
And
I
tell
you
Go
into
a
pub
and
listen
well
If
my
voice
still
echoes
there,
Ask
the
men
what
their
grandsires
thought
And
tell
them
to
answer
fair,
O
he
was
eccentric,
Fol
do
the
di
do,
He
was
eccentric
And
I
tell
you
He
had
the
knack
of
making
men
feel
As
small
as
they
really
were
Which
meant
as
great
as
God
had
made
them
But
as
males
they
disliked
his
air.
O
he
was
a
proud
one,
Fol
do
the
di
do,
He
was
a
proud
one
And
I
tell
you
If
ever
you
go
to
Dublin
town
In
a
hundred
years
or
so
Sniff
for
my
personality,
Is
it
Vanity's
vapour
now?
O
he
was
a
vain
one,
Fol
dol
the
di
do,
He
was
a
vain
one
And
I
tell
you
I
saw
his
name
with
a
hundred
more
In
a
book
in
the
library,
It
said
he
had
never
fully
achieved
His
potentiality.
O
he
was
slothful,
Fol
do
the
di
do,
He
was
slothful
And
I
tell
you
He
knew
that
posterity
had
no
use
For
anything
but
the
soul,
The
lines
that
speak
the
passionate
heart,
The
spirit
that
lives
alone.
O
he
was
a
lone
one,
Fol
do
the
di
do
O
he
was
a
lone
one,
And
I
tell
you
O
e
was
a
lone
one,
Fol
do
the
di
do
Yet
he
lived
happily
And
I
tell
you
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