Oh
list' to the lay of a poor Irish harper,
And
scorn not the strings in his old withered hands,
But
remember those fingers, they once could move sharper,
To
raise up the strains of his dear native land.
It
was long before the shamrock, dear Isle's lovely emblem,
Was
crushed in its beauty by the Saxon's lion paw,
And
all the pretty colleens around me would gather,
Called
me their bold Phelim Brady, the Bard of Armagh.
How
I love to muse on the days of my boyhood,
Though
four score and three years have fled by since then.
Still
it gives sweet reflection, as every young joys should,
For
the merry-hearted boys make the best of old men.
At
a fair or a wake I would twist my shillelagh,
And
trip through a dance with my brogues tied with straw.
There
all the pretty maidens around me would gather,
Called
me their bold Phelim Brady, the Bard of Armagh.
In
truth I have wandered this wide world over,
Yet
Ireland's
my home and a dwelling for me.
And,
oh, let the turf that my old bones shall cover
Be
cut from the land that is trod by the free.
And
when Sergeant Death in his cold arms doth embrace me,
And
lulls me to sleep with old 'Erin-go-Bragh',
By
the side of my Kathleen, my dear pride, oh, place me,
Then
forget Phelim Brady, the Bard of Armagh.