The Jolly Beggarman
I am a little beggarman, a begging I have been
 For three score years in this little isle of green
 I'm known along the Liffey from the Basin to the Zoo
 And everybody calls me by the name of Johnny Dhu.
 Of all the trades a going, sure the begging is the best
 For when a man is tired he can sit him down and rest
 He can beg for his dinner, he has nothing else to do
 But to slip around the corner with his old rigadoo.
  I slept in a barn one night in Currabawn
 A shocking wet night it was, but I slept until the dawn
 There was holes in the roof and the raindrops coming thru
 And the rats and the cats were a playing peek a boo.
  Who did I waken but the woman of the house
 With her white spotted apron and her calico blouse
 She began to frighten and I said boo
 Sure, don't be afraid at all, it's only Johnny Dhu.
  I met a little girl while a walkin out one day
 Good morrow little flaxen haired girl, I did say
 Good morrow little beggarman and how do you do
 With your rags and your tags and your auld rigadoo.
  I'll buy a pair of leggins and a collar and a tie
 And a nice young lady I'll go courting by and by
 I'll buy a pair of goggles and I'll color them with blue
 And an old fashioned lady I will make her too.
  So all along the high road with my bag upon my back
 Over the fields with my bulging heavy sack
 With holes in my shoes and my toes a peeping thru
 Singing, skin a ma rink a doodle with my auld rigadoo.
  O I must be going to bed for it's getting late at night
 The fire is all raked and now tis out of light
 For now you've heard the story of my auld rigadoo
 So good and God be with you, from auld Johnny Dhu.  |