| I was twenty four years old
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| When I met the woman I would call my own
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| Twenty two grand kids now growing old
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| In the house that your brother bought ya
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| On the summer day when I proposed
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| I made that wedding ring from dentist gold
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| And I asked her father but her daddy said, "No
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| You can't marry my daughter"
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| She and I went on the run
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| Don't care about religion
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| I'm gonna marry the woman I love
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| Down by the Wexford border
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| She was Nancy Mulligan
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| And I was William Sheeran
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| She took my name and then we were one
|
| Down by the Wexford border
|
| Well, I met her at Guy's in the second world war
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| And she was working on a soldier's ward
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| Never had I seen such beauty before
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| The moment that I saw her
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| Nancy was my yellow rose
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| And we got married wearing borrowed clothes
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| We got eight children now growing old
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| Five sons and three daughters
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| She and I went on the run
|
| Don't care about religion
|
| I'm gonna marry the woman I love
|
| Down by the Wexford border
|
| She was Nancy Mulligan
|
| And I was William Sheeran
|
| She took my name and then we were one
|
| Down by the Wexford border
|
| From her snow white streak in her jet black hair
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| Over sixty years I've been loving her
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| Now we're sat by the fire, in our old armchairs
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| You know Nancy I adore ya
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| From a farm boy born near Belfast town
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| I never worried about the king and crown
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| Cause I found my heart upon the southern ground
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| There's no difference, I assure ya
|
| She and I went on the run
|
| Don't care about religion
|
| I'm gonna marry the woman I love
|
| Down by the Wexford border
|
| She was Nancy Mulligan
|
| And I was William Sheeran
|
| She took my name and then we were one
|
| Down by the Wexford border |