Lyrics

The Ballad of Patrick Murphy

John Spillane

 

They lived beside the river at the turning of the tide

They lived beside the river, by the river they lived and they died

 

Patrick Murphy was a fisherman in the town of Passage West

With his wife and seven children he tended to his nets

 

In the year 1911 one moonlit night in May

With 3 companions Patrick rowed across to French’s Bay

 

They were fishing for a living like their fathers done before

Dreaming of the salmon all along the Mucán shore

 

They lived beside the river at the turning of the tide

They lived beside the river, by the river they lived and they died

 

Until the bailiffs boat came down the Lee, the dreaded Murricaune

They came down from Blackrock Castle with their revolvers drawn

 

The Murricaune were gangsters in the service of the crown

They murdered Patrick Murphy as he fished on the Mucán

 

In the year 2011 we gathered on the green

To remember Patrick Murphy in beautiful Toureen

 

For the people that remember that justice was not done

For the killing of Pat Murphy by a bullet from the bailiffs’ gun

 

 

 

This is my fifth time to record a John Spillane song. Sometimes we collaborate and we keep in touch along this job of journeywork. On 4th July 2015, I performed “Pat Murphy” at the Marquee in Cork. In the audience that night were Whacker and Frick Murphy, two of Patrick Murphy’s grandsons. They sailed up the River Lee from Passage West to attend the concert. Afterwards they shared stories of their Grandfathers life and times and we remembered how he had lived and died on the river. Then back aboard their boat for a moonlit voyage back to Passage West and a few pints before closing time.