The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #156947   Message #3702680
Posted By: FreddyHeadey
18-Apr-15 - 09:07 AM
Thread Name: songs with a slipjig beat
Subject: RE: songs with a slipjig beat
Re : clueless don - PM 
Date: 13 Apr 15 - 09:21 AM 
I have heard an old Irish (or Irish-American) song, sung possibly by the McNulty Family. I don't remember the title,…..


:-) good one
That song is here
Grandfather Bryan (Collected by Kenneth Peacock) 


My grandfather Bryan he died,
It was on St. Patrick's Day,
He started out for the next world
Without ever asking the way.

Leaving me all of his riches,
And a good deal of wealth do you see,
And a pair of his cloth-leather britches,
That buttoned up down to the knee.

He left me the whole two sides of a bacon,
Only one half was just cut away,
A broomstick with the head of a rake on,
And a field full of straw to make hay.

A blanket made out of cloth patches,
A breadbasket made out of tin ware,
A window without any sashes,
And a horse-collar made for a mare.

He left me a mighty great clock, too,
With brass wheels which were made out of wood,
A key without ever a lock to,
And a stool to set down where I stood.

His beaver to sport all the summer,
His whiskers to wear in the fall,
A bagful of guinea-pig's eyebrows,
And a boxful of nothing at all.

He left me some whiskey for drinking
And a beautiful stick, look at that!
And a fat Jersey heifer for milking,
With a tail of B. John Thomas' cat.

A pair of bone studs made of leather,
A satchel of old wedding rings;
Two earrings to wear in wet weather,
With a bucket of horse-stinger's wings.

He left me, poor man, a great fortune,
And a puncheon of juniper tay,
Two shares in the Rock of Gibraltar,
And a mortgage on Robin Hood's Bay.

He left me his trousers and waistcoat,
The tails of two shabby old coats;
A fortune to do me forever,
With a boxful of Union banknotes.

He left me some pastry for eating,
Oh, the creature before he did die,
Two bluchers to put me poor feet in,
And a slice of bumble-bee pie.

A pair of wet cuffs for the winter,
A red nose to hang out for a sign,
So I'm fixed in grand style for the winter,
God bless you, old grandfather Bryan!

Then hurrah for old grandfather Bryan,
I wish he were living I'm sure;
And every day he'd be dying,
He'd leave me ten times as much more.

".... Variant of a Burke Ballad collected in 1952 from Gordon Willis of St. John's, NL, by Kenneth Peacock and published in Songs Of The Newfoundland Outports, Volume 1, pp.55-56, by The National Museum Of Canada (1965) Crown Copyrights Reserved. ....####

Kenneth Peacock noted that this type of zany Irish humour has been the inspiration for many locally-composed Newfoundland ditties of recent vintage.

Per E. Cobham Brewer's Dictionary Of Phrase And Fable (1898) bluchers are half boots; so called after Field-Marshal von Blucher [1742-1819]."


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