They lived beside the river At the turning of the tide They lived beside the river By the river they lived and they died
Patrick Murphy was a fisherman, and a gentleman, and a good man, In the town of Passage West, With a wife and seven children, And he tended to his nets.
In nineteen and eleven, On a lovely night in May, He rowed with three companions, Across to French's Bay.
A fishing for a living, Like their fathers did before, They were dreaming of the salmon, As they waited on the shore.
Ah they lived beside the river, At the turning of the tide, They lived beside the river, By the river they lived and they died.
But a bailiff's boat came down the Lee, The dreaded Murricawn, They came down from Blackrock Castle, They sailed down past the Moocawn,
For the bailliffs they were gangsters, In the service of the crown, They came down with revolvers, And they shot Pat Murphy down.
They lived beside the river, At the turning of the tide, They lived beside the river, By the river they lived and they died.
'Bring in that man who shot me, Before you and I must part, I hold no grudge against him, I forgive him from my heart'
But the people still remember That justice was not done, For the killing of Pat Murphy, By the bullet from a bailliff's gun
Ah they lived beside the river, At the turning of the tide, They lived beside the river, By the river they laughed and they cried, By the river they dreamed and they sighed, By the river they lived and they died.Teksty umieszczone na naszej stronie są własnością wytwórni, wykonawców, osób mających do nich prawa.