The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #119899   Message #527937
Posted By: MMario
14-Aug-01 - 03:13 PM
Thread Name: ADD: songs from 'Songs and Ballads of Ireland'
Subject: ADD: Digging for Gould
DIGGING FOR GOULD
(SONGS AND BALLADS OF IRELAND - p 43)

Darby Kelly below in Kilkenny did live,
A sketch of whose character I'm going to give:
He was thought by the people a green polished rogue.
He could wastle the whisky, as wastle the old brogue.
All kinds of diseases with herbs he could cure,
He'd interpret your dreams, to be certain and sure;
By the boys of the village he often was fool'd,
For, aslape or awake, he was dreaming of gould.

He had a fine open house, but the winders were broke,
The gables were down to let out the smoke;
Some beautiful pigs through the wild world to range,
Though they were thin, they were thick with the mange.
He was so neglectful of domestic affairs.
The rats ate the bottoms all out of his chairs;
And the wife by the jusband was so overruled,
When she axed him for coppers he was talking of gould.

The house thus neglected, sure nothing went right;
When a youth of the village came to him one night,
A nice boy he was, his name was Dan Mac,
And ready to fly with the duds on his back,
All the clothes that he had wasn't enough
To make him a bolster to stick on a crutch,
And his juvenile days in a lime kiln were schooled,
But he used to cod Darby about finding gould

Says Dan: Ere last night I had a beautiful dream,
But bad luck to the doubt! last night I'd the same;
And tod-day, as I dozed, after slacking some lime,
I dreamt it again for the third and last time,
Och, muder! Says Darby, come tell us your dream,
Same time his two eyes like buckets did gleam;
Says Dan: I dreamt at the castle Killcool,
I found a joar that was crammed full of gould.

Poor Darby's big mouth opened like a dead Haicke,
Saying: You'll be a hero, just like your namesake;
You'll ride in your coach, you fortunate elf,
While I may be in one going down to the hulks.
No matter, said Darby, we must emigrate,
So, come down at midnight, and don't be too late;
Bring some boys whose courage won't easy be cooled,
And we'll dig till daylight to find all the gould.

They arrive at the castle, about one o'clock,
Where Dan dreamt he found all the gould in a crock;
They all set to work with picks, shovels and spades,
And a hole , that would swallow a house, soon was made
Says Darby: Bad luck to the curse we must give,
Or we'll be beggars as long as we live!
Says Dan: May the devil on my back be stooled,
For, I have bursted my breeches in digging for gould.

The prayers availed nothin, the crock was not found,
Tim rooney he lifted it over the ground;
With joy Darby leaped on the back of Ned Flail,
Like a fish from the stream with a hook in his tail.
Says Darby: My wife won't abuse me to-night
When I take home the shiners so yellow and bright!
I'll buy house and land about Kilcool;
And we'll all bless the night we went digging for gould!

The crock was then placed on Darby's own back
To carry home, and each man have his whack;
They arrived at the door with the gould to be sacked,
When Mac with a spade knocked the crock into smash.
Poor Darby, near smothered, run in with a fright,
His wife jumps up to get him a light,
When she heard Darby mourning her passion was cooled,
She knew by the smell he was covered with gould.