| Louis Untermeyer, ed. (18851977). Modern British Poetry. 1920. |
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| J. M. Synge. 18711909 |
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| 75. Beg-Innish |
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| BRING Kateen-beug and Maurya Jude | |
| To dance in Beg-Innish, | |
| And when the lads (they're in Dunquin) | |
| Have sold their crabs and fish, | |
| Wave fawny shawls and call them in, | 5 |
| And call the little girls who spin, | |
| And seven weavers from Dunquin, | |
| To dance in Beg-Innish. | |
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| I'll play you jigs, and Maurice Kean, | |
| Where nets are laid to dry, | 10 |
| I've silken strings would draw a dance | |
| From girls are lame or shy; | |
| Four strings I've brought from Spain and France | |
| To make your long men skip and prance, | |
| Till stars look out to see the dance | 15 |
| Where nets are laid to dry. | |
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| We'll have no priest or peeler in | |
| To dance in Beg-Innish; | |
| But we'll have drink from M'riarty Jim | |
| Rowed round while gannets fish, | 20 |
| A keg with porter to the brim, | |
| That every lad may have his whim, | |
| Till we up sails with M'riarty Jim | |
| And sail from Ben-Innish. | |
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