- Votes:
- Composer:
- Christy Moore/andy Irvine/donal Lunny/liam O'flynn
 
- See also:
Planxty - Pat Reilly lyrics
It bein' on a monday morning, it bein' our pay day
 We met Sergeant Jenkins at our goin' away
 He says to Pat Reilly "You are a handsome young man
 Will you come to John Kelly's where we will set a dram"
 And while we sat there boozin' and drinkin' our dram
 He says to Pat Reilly "You are a handsome young man
 I'd have you take the bounty and come along with me
 To the sweet County Longford, strange faces there
 You'll see"
 "Oh no kind sir, a soldier's life with me would not
 Agree
 Nor neither would I bind myself down from my liberty
 For I lived as happy as a prince, my mind does tell me
 So
 So fare thee well, I'm just goin' down, my shackle for
 To thow?
 "Oh are you in a hurry, are you goin' away?
 Or won't you stop and listen to these words I'm goin'
 To say
 Perhaps now Pat Reilly, you might do something worse
 Than to leave your native country and enlist in thePlanxty - Pat Reilly - http://motolyrics.com/planxty/pat-reilly-lyrics.html
Black Horse"
 Oh it's I took the bounty, the reckoning was paid
 The ribbons were brought out, me boys, and into my
 Cockade
 It's early the next morning we all were made to stand
 Before our grand general with hats all in our hands
 He says to Pat Reilly "You are a little too low
 With some other regiment I fear you have to go"
 "I may go where I will, I have no-one to mourn
 For my mother is dead, me boys, and never will return"
 It's not in the morning that I sing this song
 But it's in the cold evening as I march alone
 With me gun o'er my shoulder I bitterly do weep
 When I think of my true love that now lies fast asleep
 My blessing on my mother that reared me neat and clean
 But bad luck to my father that made me serve the queen
 Oh had he been an honest man and learned to me my trade
 I would never have enlisted nor worn the cockade

















