The Juice of the Barley

In the sweet country Lim'rick, one cold winter's night
All the turf fires were burning when I first saw the light
And a drunken old midwife went tipsy with joy
As she danced round the floor with her slip of a boy

Singing ban-ya-na mo if an-ga-na
And the juice of the barley for me

Well when I was a gossoon of eight years old or so
With me turf and me primer to school I did go
To a dusty old school house without any door
Where lay the school master blind drunk on the floor

Singing ban-ya-na mo if an-ga-na
And the juice of the barley for me

At the learning I wasn't such a genius I'm thinking,
But I soon bet the master entirely at drinking,
Not a wake or a wedding for five miles around,
But meself in the corner was sure to be found.

Singing ban-ya-na mo if an-ga-na
And the juice of the barley for me

One Sunday the priest thread me out from the altar
Saying you'll end up your days with your neck in a halter;
And you'll dance a fine jig between heaven and hell
And his words they did frighten me the truth for to tell

Singing ban-ya-na mo if an-ga-na
And the juice of the barley for me

So the very next morning as the dawn it did break
I went down to the vestry the pledge for to take,
And there in that room sat the priests in a bunch
Round a big roaring fire drinking tumblers of punch

Singing ban-ya-na mo if an-ga-na
And the juice of the barley for me

Well from that day to this I have wandered alone
I'm a jack of all trades and a master of none,
With the sky for me roof and the earth for me floor,
And I'll dance out my days frinking whiskey galore

Singing ban-ya-na mo if an-ga-na
And the juice of the barley for me



Credits
Writer(s): Liam Clancy, Arr By Pd Trad
Lyrics powered by www.musixmatch.com

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