| Oh me name is Michael Conway, in old Ireland I was born
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| Near the lake of Cloonacolly on a bright summer’s morn
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| But soon came cruel winter to break and scatter my poor home
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| Soon came the harsh day that forced me to roam
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| Well I reached bold Philadelphia in the brave land of the free
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| Where I met with my two brothers; |
| There was Pat, James, then me
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| We were destined for the rich land, fate owes us all from birth
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| We were bound for Butte, Montana, the richest hill on earth
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| Where their pockets they bulge heavy, when copper’s running high
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| Where the hill rewards her brave sons, it’s fortune or die
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| Where they tread on silver dollars on the crowded barroom floor
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| While they strip the granite mountain of her precious copper ore
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| Well we leaped down off that steam train, and stepped out into the yellow
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| Mist
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| With holes still in our hearts then, and a fight in either fist
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| No kind face to lead us up to where the dirty smelter spat
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| And it’s there I took to hard labor as a Butte mining rat
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| Where we trade the hours of daylight for the smell of copper ore
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| Where it’s whiskey and the cow pats to cure our copper sores
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| Where half the town it labors while the other half it sleeps
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| Where upon the granite mountain, a mile high and deep
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| Oh they know me down in Dogtown, bare knuckle I would go
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| For there’s not a man could best me while standing toe to toe
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| But I defied the crooked sheriff, for I wouldn’t throw his fight away
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| He should have laid it on at 5 to 2, and backed the bold Conway
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| I was lifted in Con Peoples, with the beer and music flowing free
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| Where my brothers had just left me, Oh bad fortune for me
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| Dragged out by crooked cowards, their batons knocked me off my feet
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| And they left me to die there, like a dog in the street
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| Far from the Anaconda, the mine with seven stacks
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| Far from the ashen faces of young men with crooked backs
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| Far from the granite mountain and the dusty grave in which I lie
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| My spirit chases starlings 'round a clear Mayo sky |