Mike, i think if we sit back here in the snug we can see the fight without spilling our Black and Tans. ;^)
I was a booking agent for Robbie OConnell for a year or so in the late 80s, out West only; another gal booked his East coast stuff. He was the nephew who began playing with the Clancy Bros after Tommy died. He and his wife contracted to have me make a huge trestle table for their large brood and a couple Arts & Crafts style couches that i drove back to their place in MA. I got to hang with Tony Cuffe (Ossian), Mick Moloney (Green Fields of America, Cherish the Ladies mentor)...what halcyon days those were. Mick is from Limerick, so i've always...very fondly...thought of him as...
THE LIMERICK RAKE
I am a young fellow that's easy and bold, In Castletown Conners I'm very well known; In Newcastle West I spent many a note With Kitty and Molly and Mary.
My parents rebuked me for being such a rake And spending my time in such frolicsome ways, But I ne've could forget the good nature of Jane, Agus fagaimid siud mar ata se.
My parents, they reared me to shake and to sow, To plough and to harrow, to reap and to mow; But my heart was too airy to drop it so low, I set out on a high speculation.
On paper and parchment they taught me to write And in Euclid and grammar they opened my eyes, But in multiplication, in truth, I was bright, Agus fagaimid siud mar ata se.
To quarrel for riches I ne'er was inclined, For the greatest of misers must leave them behind; I'll purchase a cow that will never run dry And I'll milk her by twisting her horn.
John Damer of Shronel had plenty of gold And Devonshire's treasure was twenty times more, But he's laid on his back among nettles and stones, Agus fagaimid siud mar ata se.
If I chance for to go to the market at Croom, With a cock in my hat and my pipes in full tune, I am welcome at once and brought up to a room Where Bacchus is sporting with Venus.
There's Peggy and Jane from the town of Bruree, And Biddy from Bruff and we all on the spree, Such a combing of locks as there was about me, Agus fagaimid siud mar ata se.
There's some say I'm foolish, there's more say I'm wise, For love of the women I'm sure 'tis no crime; For the son of King David had ten hundred wives And his wisdom is highly recorded.
I'll till a good garden and live at my ease And the women and children can partake of the same, If there's war in the cabin, themselves are to blame, Agus fagaimid siud mar ata se.
And now for the future I mean to be wise, And I'll send for the women that treated me kind; And I'll marry them all on the morrow, by and by If the clergy agree to the bargain.
And when I'm on my back and my soul is at peace The women will crowd for to cry at my wake, And their sons and their daughters will utter their prayers To the Lord for the sake of their father.
That boy could play hell out of a mandolin.... *sigh*