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The Irish Rover(Traditional)


       C                                   F
On the fourth of July eighteen hundred and six
       C             Am            G
We set sail from the sweet Cobh of Cork
        C                            F
We were sailing away with a cargo of bricks
        C          G           C
For the grand city hall in New York
         C                      G
'Twas an elegant craft, she was rigged fore and aft
    C                 G
And how the wild wind drove her
          C                                       F
She could stand a great blast in her twenty seven masts
       C                    G C
And we called her the Irish Rover
We had one million bags of the best Sligo rags
We had two million barrels of stones
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
We had seven million barrels of porter
We had eight million bales of old nanny goat tails
In the hold of the Irish Rover
There was Barney McGee from the banks of the Lee
There was Hogan from County Tyrone
There was Johnny McGuirk who was scared stiff of work
And a chap from Westmeath called Malone
There was Slugger O'Toole who was drunk as a rule
And fighting Bill Tratcy 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 measels broke out
And our ship lost it's way in the fog
Then the whole of the crew was reduced down to two
Just myself and the captain's old dog
The ship struck a rock, Lord what a shock
The boat, it was flipped right over
Turned nine times around and the poor old dog was drowned
I'm the last of the Irish Rover
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