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[ti:galway bay] |
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[ar:celtic woman] |
[00:40.26] |
If you ever go across the sea to Ireland |
[00:47.95] |
Then maybe at the closing of your day |
[00:54.95] |
You can sit and watch the moon rise over Claddagh |
[01:01.95] |
And see the sun go down on Galway Bay |
[01:10.70] |
Just to hear again the ripple of the trout stream |
[01:18.14] |
The women in the meadow making hay |
[01:24.33] |
Just to sit beside the turf fire in a cabin |
[01:31.08] |
And watch the barefoot gosoons as they play |
[02:07.02] |
For the breezes blowing o'er the sea's from Ireland |
[02:15.02] |
Ooooh |
[02:15.27] |
Are perfumed by the heather as they blow |
[02:20.52] |
And the women in the uplands digging praties |
[02:27.09] |
Speak a language that the strangers do not know |
[02:34.09] |
Yet the strangers came and tried to teach us their ways |
[02:40.78] |
And they scorned us just for being what we are |
[02:46.90] |
But they might as well go chasin after moon beams |
[02:53.40] |
Or light a penny candle from a star |
[03:01.47] |
And if there's gonna be a life here after |
[03:07.47] |
And faith somehow I'm sure there's gonna be |
[03:13.36] |
I will ask my God to let me make my Heaven |
[03:20.19] |
In that dear land across the Irish sea |
[03:27.62] |
I will ask my God to let me make my Heaven |
[03:34.88] |
In my dear land across the Irish sea |
[03:47.25] |
Oooooooh |
[04:01.82] |
In my dear land across the Irish sea |