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The Mountains Of Pomeroy (Kilrush Fleadh 1967)

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Uploaded by on May 1, 2008

"The morn was breaking bright and fair,
The lark sang in the sky,
When the maid she bound her goIden hair,
With a blithe glance in her eye;
For, who beyond the gay green-wood,
Was a-waiting her with joy,
Oh, who but her gallant Renardine,
On the mountains of Pomeroy.

An outlawed man in a land forlorn,
He scorned to turn and fly,
But kept the cause of freedom safe
Up on the mountains high.

Full often in the dawning hour,
Full oft in twilight brown
He met the maid in the woodland bow'r,
Where the stream comes foaming down
For they were faithful in a love
No wars could e'er destroy.
No tyrant's law touched Renardine,
On the mountains of Pomeroy.

"Dear love, " she said, "l'm sore afraid,
For the foeman's force and you
They've tracked you in the lowland plain
And all the valley through.
My kinsmen frown when you are named
Your life they would destroy
'Beware,' they say, 'of Renardine,
On the mountains of Pomeroy."

"Fear not, fear not, sweetheart," he cried,
"Fear not the foe for me
No chain shall fall, whate'er betide,
On the arm that would be free!
Oh, leave your cruel kin and come,
When the lark is in the sky.
And it's with my gun I'll guard you,
On the mountains of Pomeroy."

The morn has come, she rose and fled
From her cruel kin and home;
And bright the wood, and rosy red,
And the dumbling torrent's foam.
But the mist came down and the tempest roared,
And did all around destroy;
And a pale, drowned bride met Renardine,
On the mountains of Pomeroy."

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Uploader Comments (clarebannerman)

  • Hi, Bannerman!

    What is the instrument that looks like the austro-bavarian "Zither"?

    Regards from Vienna, I hope to get some Johann Strauss recordings for you!

    Michael

  • It's an autoharp.

Top Comments

  • Great song great version, I first heard that song by an Artist called A Gilligam , It was sung with bagpipes with a higher tempo and recorded by outlet records. love to hear that version again, you have rekindled a favorite song of mine !

  • who by >?

Video Responses

This video is a response to Seamus Begley-Mountains of Pomeroy
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All Comments (33)

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  • I liked that, and your four minutes of fame. Thanks for sharing. One of our people in the group plans an autoharp. Enjoyed it. Thanks. Gwen

  • Without doubt, still my favorite clip from Kilrush Fleadh 1966!

  • This is great:)

  • This still really makes me smile. Thanks again.

  • Thanks for the music, Michael. I now have a YouTube account so I can keep listening. Janet

  • Excellent! Wonderful to see the autoharp! I especially love you included ALL the verses of the Mountains of Pomeroy -thank you!

  • boyo boy; the autoharp; great to see this instrument being used with skill; my daughter picked up one in a junk market; needs tuned but looks an intriguing wee thing to learn.

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