| There’s a uniform hanging | 
| In what’s known as Father’s room | 
| A uniform so simple in it’s style | 
| It has no braid of silk nor gold | 
| No hat with feathered plumes | 
| Yet me Mother has preserved it all the while | 
| One day she made me try it on | 
| A wish of mine for years | 
| «Just a memory of your father, Sean» she said | 
| And as I tried the Sam Browne on | 
| She was smiling through her tears | 
| As she placed the broad black brimmer on me head | 
| It’s just a broad black brimmer | 
| It’s ribbons frayed and torn | 
| By the careless whisk of manies a mountain breeze | 
| An old trench coat that’s a battle stained and worn | 
| And the breeches almost threadbare at the knees | 
| A Sam Browne belt, with a buckle big and strong | 
| And a holster that’s been empty many a day | 
| And when men claim Ireland’s freedom | 
| The one they’ll choose to lead 'em | 
| Will wear the broad black brimmer of the IRA | 
| That uniform was worn by me father long ago | 
| When he reached me mother’s homestead on the run | 
| That uniform was worn in that little church below | 
| When Father Mac he blessed the pair as one | 
| And after Truce and Treaty and the parting of the ways | 
| He wore it when he marched out with the rest | 
| And as they bore his body down the rugged heather braes | 
| They placed the broad black brimmer on his breast | 
| It’s just a broad black brimmer | 
| It’s ribbons frayed and torn | 
| By the careless whisk of manies a mountain breeze | 
| An old trench coat that’s a battle stained and worn | 
| And the breeches almost threadbare at the knees | 
| A Sam Browne belt, with a buckle big and strong | 
| And a holster that’s been empty many a day | 
| And when men claim Ireland’s freedom | 
| The one they’ll choose to lead 'em | 
| Will wear the broad black brimmer of the IRA | 
| There’s a uniform hanging | 
| In what’s known as Father’s room | 
| A uniform so simple in it’s style | 
| It has no braid of silk nor gold | 
| No hat with feathered plumes | 
| Yet me Mother has preserved it all the while | 
| One day she made me try it on | 
| A wish of mine for years | 
| «Just a memory of your father, Sean» she said | 
| And as I tried the Sam Browne on | 
| She was smiling through her tears | 
| As she placed the broad black brimmer on me head | 
| It’s just a broad black brimmer | 
| It’s ribbons frayed and torn | 
| By the careless whisk of manies a mountain breeze | 
| An old trench coat that’s a battle stained and worn | 
| And the breeches almost threadbare at the knees | 
| A Sam Browne belt, with a buckle big and strong | 
| And a holster that’s been empty many a day | 
| And when men claim Ireland’s freedom | 
| The one they’ll choose to lead 'em | 
| Will wear the broad black brimmer of the IRA |