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Arthur McBride (New Recording)

Oh me and my cousin, one Arthur McBride

As we went a walkin' down by the seaside

Now mark what followed and what did betide

It being on Christmas morning

Out for recreation we went on a tramp

And we met Sergeant Knacker and Corporal Cramp (or Vamp)

And a little wee drummer intending to camp

For the day being pleasant and charming

Good morning, good morning the sergeant did cry

And the same to you gentlemen, we did reply

Intending no harm but meant to pass by

For it being on Christmas morning

But says he my fine fellows if you will enlist

It's ten guineas in gold I will slip in your fist

And a crown in the bargain for to kick up the dust

And to drink the King's health in the morning

For a soldier he leads a very fine life

He always is blessed with a charming young wife

And he pays all his debts without sorrow or strife

And always lives happy and charming

And a soldier he always is decent and clean

In the finest of clothing he's constantly seen

While other poor fellows go dirty and mean

And sup on thin gruel in the morning

Says Arthur, I wouldn't be proud of your clothes

You've only the lend of them as I suppose

And you dare not change them one night or you know

If you do you'll be flogged in the morning

And although we are single and free

We take great delight in our own company

And we have no desire strange places to see

Although your offer is charming

And we have no desire to take your advance

All hazards and danger we barter on chance

and you'd have no scruples to send us to France

Where we would be shot without warning

And now says the sergeant, I'll have no such chat

And I neither will take it from spalpeen or brat

For if you insult me with one other word

I'll cut off your heads in the morning

And then Arthur and I we soon drew our hods?

And we scarce gave them time for to draw their own blades

When a trusty shillelagh came over their heads

And bade them take that as fair warning

As for their old rusty rapiers that hung by their sides

We flung it as far as we could in the tide

To the Devil I pitch you, says Arthur McBride

To temper your steel in the morning

As for the wee drummer, we rifled his pow

And made a football of his row-do-dow-dow

Into the tide to rock and to roll

And bade it a tedious returnin'

And we haven't no money to pay them off in cracks

And we paid no respect to the two bloody backs

For we lathered them there like a pair of wet sacks

And left them for dead in the morning

And so to conclude and to finish disputes

We obligingly asked if they wanted recruits

For we were the lads who would give them hard clouts

And bid them look sharp in the morning

Oh me and my cousin, one Arthur McBride

As we went a walkin' down by the seaside

Now mark what followed and what did betide

It being on Christmas morning

After many years of evolution, Andy Irvine sings the first few verses slightly differently:

I had a first cousin called Arthur McBride

He and I took a stroll down by the seaside;

Seeking good fortune and what might betide

It was just as the day was a'dawnin'

After restin' we both took a tramp

We met Sergeant Harper and Corporal Cramp

Besides the wee drummer who beat up the camp

With his row-dee-dow-dow in the morning

He says my young fellows if you will enlist

A guinea you quickly will have in your fist

Besides a crown for to kick up the dust

And drink the King's health in the morning

(the rest is the same)

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Lyrics submitted by Agnes.

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