|
Near to Banbridge town in the
County Down
One morning last July
Down a boreen green came a sweet colleen
And she smiled as she passed me by.
She looked so sweet from her two bare feet
To the sheen of her nut brown hair
Such a coaxing elf, sure I shook myself
To make sure I was standing there.
Chorus:
From Bantry Bay up to Derry Quay
And from Galway to Dublin town,
No maid I've seen like the brown colleen
I saw in the County Down!
2. She'd a soft brown eye and a look so sly
And a smile like the rose in June
And you hung on each note from her lily white throat
As she lilted an Irish tune
At the pattern dance you were held in a trance
As she tripped through a reel or a jig,
And when her eyes she'd
roll, she'd coax,
on my soul,
A spud from a hungry pig!
Chorus:
|
|
3. I've travelled a
bit, but never was hit
Since my roving career
began,
But, fair and square, I
surrendered there
To the charms of young Rosie
McCann!
With a heart to let, and no
tenant yet,
Did I meet in shawl or gown,
But in she went, and I asked
no rent
From the Star of the County
Down!
Chorus:
4. As she onward sped
sure I scratched my head
And I looked with a feeling
rare
And I says, says I, to a
passer by,
"Who's the maid with
the nut brown hair?"
He smiled at me and he said,
said he,
"That's the gem of
Ireland's crown.
Young Rosie McCann from the
banks of the Bann,
She's the Star of the County
Down."
Chorus:
5. At the harvest fair
she'll be surely there,
So I'll dress in my Sunday
clothes
With my shoes shone bright
and my hat cocked right
For a smile from my nut
brown Rose
No pipe I'll smoke, no horse
I'll yoke,
Till my plough is a rust
coloured brown
Till a smiling bride by my
own fireside
Sits the Star of the County
Down.
Chorus:
|