| 'Ah, misses McGrath', the sergeant said
|
| 'Would you like to make a soldier out of your son Ted
|
| With a scarlet coat and a big cocked hat
|
| 'Ah, misses McGrath', the sergeant said
|
| 'Would you like to make a soldier out of your son Ted
|
| With a scarlet coat and a big cocked hat
|
| And misses McGrath, wouldn’t you like that?'
|
| Wid yer toori al fol the diddle ah
|
| Toori oori oori ah
|
| Wid yer toori al fol the diddl eah
|
| Toori oori oori ah
|
| Well Mrs McGrath lived by the seashore
|
| For the space of seven long years or more
|
| Till she saw a big ship sailing into the bay
|
| 'Here's my son Ted, will ye clear the way?'
|
| 'Ah captain dear, and where have you been?
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| Have you been in the Mediterranean?
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| Will ye tell me the news of my son Ted?
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| Is the poor lad living now or is he dead?'
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| Ah, well up comes Ted without any legs
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| And in their place he had two wooden pegs
|
| Well she kissed him a dozen times or two
|
| Saying: 'Glory be to God, sure it couldn’t be you'
|
| 'Ah then were ye drunk or were ye blind
|
| That ye left yer two fine legs behind?
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| Or was it while walking on the sea
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| A big fish ate yer legs from the knees away?'
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| 'Well I wasn’t drunk and I wasn’t blind
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| When I left my two fine legs behind
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| But a big cannonball on the fifth of May
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| Flow my two fine legs from the knees away'
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| 'Ah Teddy me boy', the poor widow cried
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| 'Yer two fine legs were yer mummy’s pride
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| Them old stumps of a tree wouldn’t do at all
|
| Why didn’t ye run for the big cannonball?'
|
| 'Well all foreign wars I do proclaim
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| Between Don John and the King of Spain
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| And by herrings I’ll make them rue the time
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| That they shot the legs from a child of mine' |