Artisto: | The Dubliners (English) |
Uzanto: | Klaus Peter |
Daŭro: | 130 sekundoj |
Komenca paŭzo: | 12 sekundoj |
Tononoma sistemo: | Ne definita |
Sakra: | |
Komentoj pri tabulaturo: | - |
The Old Man's Tale
Words by Ian Campbell, tune traditional ('Nicky Tams')
Sung by Ronnie Drew (who else could have done it better?)
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1 At the turning of the century I was a boy of five
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Me father went to fight the Boers and never came back alive.
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Me mother was left to bring us up, no charity she'd seek,
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So she washed and scrubbed and scrapped along on seven and six a week.
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2 When I was twelve I left the school and went to find a job
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I took the royal shilling and went off to do my bit,
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I lived on mud and tears and blood, three years or thereabouts
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Then I copped some gas in Flanders and got invalided out.
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3 Well when the war was over and we'd settled with the Hun,
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We got back into civvies and we thought the fighting done,
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We'd won the right to live in peace but we didn't have such luck,
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For we found that we had to fight for the right to go to work.
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4 In '26 the General Strike found me out in the streets,
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Although I'd wife and kids by then and their needs I had to meet,
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For a brave new world was coming and I taught them wrong from right,
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But Hitler was the lad who came and taught them how to fight.
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5 My daughter was a landgirl, she got married to a Yank.
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And they gave my son a medal for stopping one of Rommel's tanks.
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He was wounded just before the end and he convalesced in Rome,
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He married an E-gyptien nurse,they never bothered to come home.
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6 My daughter writes me once a month, a cheerful little note
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About their colour telly and the other things they've got.
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She's got a son, a likely lad; he's nearly twenty-one,
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And she tells me now they've called him up to fight in Vietnam.
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7 We're living on the pension now, it doesn't go too far.
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Not much to show for a life that seems like one long bloody war.
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When you think of all the wasted lives it makes you want to cry.
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I'm not sure how to change things, but by Christ we'll have to try.