| There’s a man on the run | 
| And he’s never been caught | 
| He moves at the speed | 
| Of the power of thought | 
| And he carries the news | 
| In a gleam of his eye | 
| That what you’ve been told | 
| Is a kind of a lie | 
| His enemies number fallen priests | 
| Men of power and the crooked police | 
| Cynics from the school of hard knocks | 
| And a motley crowd of mis-matched other old crocks | 
| Who’re never ever gonna catch | 
| The Connemara Fox | 
| They chased him in Cong | 
| They missed him in Maam | 
| He was already gone | 
| Never giving a damn | 
| Wanted dead or alive | 
| Up the back of of Dog’s Bay | 
| But by the time they arrived | 
| He was leagues away | 
| In an oyster bar playing dominoes | 
| And the only clues he left his foes | 
| Were a fistful of dust, a change of the locks | 
| The words of a Kris Kristofferson song, a pair of old socks | 
| And graffiti saying so long, suckers | 
| Love, the Connemara Fox | 
| He was in Bunnahown | 
| On the day of the fair | 
| When ship-like clouds | 
| Sailed the summer air | 
| And a bodhran thumped | 
| And a saxophone played | 
| As the people jumped | 
| And danced at the side of the bay | 
| They say he had long elegant fingers | 
| And when he was gone magic lingered | 
| A bolt of love that stopped the clocks | 
| From the village lane where the washing hung to the city blocks | 
| The name on every tongue | 
| Was the Connemara Fox | 
| He left a diktat | 
| On the priest’s window sill | 
| It said «Crough Paaaatrick, Sonny | 
| Is the paganest hill» | 
| In the whole lump of Ireland | 
| It shone with green light | 
| That’s why they buried its power | 
| Under Christian rites | 
| And that bogus name to which it never belonged | 
| That you can’t even rhyme in a spell or a song | 
| You’re trying to put life back into the box" | 
| And the priest ran out with a yell in the night in his cap and frocks | 
| He never even caught sight | 
| Of the Connemara Fox | 
| He’ll be where there is music | 
| He’ll be where there is crack | 
| He’ll be howling the blues | 
| In the yard out back | 
| He’ll be down in the Claddagh | 
| Playin' pitch and toss | 
| He says guilt’s an imposter, baby | 
| You been double-crossed | 
| And just when you think you’ve got him pegged | 
| All you’ll see are the backs of his legs | 
| A shadow passing way over the rocks | 
| A wisp of hair, a ghostly snatch of the sound of a box | 
| No one’s ever gonna catch | 
| The Connemara Fox | 
| The Connemara Fox | 
| The Connemara Fox | 
| The Connemara Fox | 
| The Connemara Fox |