| Oh list to the lay of a poor Irish harper
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| And scorn not the strains of his old, withered hands
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| But remember his fingers, they once could move sharper
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| To raise up the memory of his dear native land
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| At a fair or a wake, I could twist my shillelagh
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| Or trip through a jig with my brogues bound with straw
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| And all the pretty colleens around me assembled
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| Loved their bold Phelim Brady, the bard of Armagh
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| Oh, how I long to muse on the days of my boyhood
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| But four score and three years have flitted since then
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| But they bring sweet reflections, as every young joy should
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| For, the merry hearted boys makes the best of old men
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| And when sergeant death, in his cold arms shall embrace me
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| And lull me to sleep with sweet Erin go bragh
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| By the side of my Kathleen, my young wife then place me
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| Then forget Phelim Brady, the bard of Armagh |