Scoil: Ballyhahill (B.), Glin (uimhir rolla 10685)
- Suíomh:
- Baile Dhá Thuile, Co. Luimnigh
- Múinteoir: Domhnall Ó Maoláin
Sonraí oscailte
Ar fáil faoin gceadúnas Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
- XML Scoil: Ballyhahill (B.), Glin
- XML Leathanach 138a
- XML “Severe Weather - The Song of the Wind of 1839”
Nóta: Ní fada go mbeidh Comhéadan Feidhmchláir XML dúchas.ie dímholta agus API úrnua cuimsitheach JSON ar fáil. Coimeád súil ar an suíomh seo le haghaidh breis eolais.
Ar an leathanach seo
- (ar lean ón leathanach roimhe)Old Ireland's Windy Nights
Gather around me men of IReland
And listen to my Song.
About old Irelan'ds windy night
I won't detain you long
Sure there never was anight like it
Nor one to keep in mind
Like that night of Jan the 6th of 1839
'The Kerry Cows you know they're small
Went flying through the air
It must have been a funny sight
To seem them land in Clare
She blew the peaks of Cuddy's Reek
Then kept across the moor
Sure the people thought they'd all be killed
The way that wind did roar
In County Tipperary not from from Galteemore
A man named Tom O'Casey
and his wife and children 4
Were lifted from their beds that night
The devil a lie I tell
And landed bag & baggage
In the town of Patrickswell.
another family named Burk who lived near Skibbereen
Were blown from Cork to Kerry they came down a Cahersiveen
But they enjoyed their journed as they rode along the gale
For neer a one of them work up at least so goes the tale
In Limerick, that's my county, near the bog of Ballygrane,
I often heard my father say how he and Jim McCann
were coming form a wake that night
Caher(?) Mac Coreen and all were lifted high into the air and blown to DonegalIry Irry (over)(leanann ar an chéad leathanach eile)- Faisnéiseoir
- Patrick Roche
- Inscne
- Fireann
- Seoladh
- Cill Mhainchín Thiar, Co. Chiarraí