I Think of Old Ireland wherever I Go.

I’m a wanderer, now, from the land of my birth,

Far away from the scenes I hold dearest on earth,

And I’ve seen both the beauties of the Nile and Arno,

Still I think of old Ireland, wherever I go.

CHORUS

I think of old Ireland, across the blue wave,

I think of old Ireland, the land of the brave,

’Tis the home of the brave, where the wild shamrocks grow,

Oh, I think of old Ireland, wherever I go.

And ’tis soon I’ll be home, in the land I love best,

In my own dearest Emerald Isle of the West,

Though now I am chasing the wild buffalo,

For I think of old Ireland wherever I go.

Yet though far away from that dear blessed sod,

I still offer up prayers to my country’s God,

To chase from her borders the base Saxon foe,

For I think of old Ireland wherever I go.

Dear land of the shamrock, and sweet smelling brier,

Dear scenes of my childhood which never could tire,

When a boy I picked beech-nuts in wild Glenaboe,

Oh, I think of old Ireland, wherever I go.

And how oft have I drank out of Barranane’s Well,

In whose clear waters there lurks a bright spell,

The afflicted go there to find ease for their woe,

For I think of old Ireland wherever I go.

And how oft have I swam in the Blackwater’s tide,

And roam’d the sweet wild woods around Castle Hyde,

For it’s through its wild woodland the Blackwaters flow,

Oh, I think of old Ireland wherever I go.

And how oft have I sported through its pastures so green,

Where the wild fragrant daisy can always be seen,

For flowers in luxuriance there always do grow,

Oh, I think of old Ireland wherever I go.

But all my sad wanderings soon will be o’er,

And that isle of my heart I will never leave more,

Though deep is her sorrow, and bitter her woe,

Oh, I think of old Ireland wherever I go.