| G | I'll t | ell me ma when I get home, |
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| D7 | G | the b | oys won't leave the g | irls alone, |
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| G | P | ulled me hair, stole me comb |
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| D7 | G | but th | at's allright till | I go home. |
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| G | C | Sh | e is handsome, s | he is pretty |
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| G | D7 | s | he is the Belle of D | ublin city, |
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| G | C | Sh | e is a courtin' a | one two three, |
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| G | D7 | G | Pr | ay can you t | ell me wh | o is she? |
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(For the next verses, you can swap the chord patterns of the |
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first two lines and second two lines, so you start with |
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for the first line. Dubliners usualy do swap, but not always. |
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Do as you like better...) |
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Albert Mooney says he loves her, |
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all the boys are fightin' for her, |
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Knock at the door, ring at the bell, |
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and "Oh, me true love, are you well?" |
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Out she comes, white as snow, |
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rings on her fingers, bells on her toes |
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Ould Johny Morrissey says she'll die, |
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if she doesn't get a fella with the roving eye. |
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Let the wind and the rain and the hail blow high, |
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and the snow comes a travelin' through the sky, |
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She's as sweet as an apple pie, |
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she'll get her own lad by and by, |
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When she gets a lad of her own, |
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she won't tell her ma when she gets home. |
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Let them all come as they will, |
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It's Albert Mooney she loves still. |
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