The sun so gently warmed the coarse skin of my cheek Before going down and dying behind the roofs of Baggot Street We were playing an old song called "The Rare Old Mountain Dew" A few quid in our case, good for some pints of plain When on the Road I was dead beat, dirty and penniless Sometimes I missed the warmth of home and sure my sweet colleen But out there is where I have found an offbeat happiness In the smile of a child or in a wise man's clap We had no cares, we had no ties and then nothing to lose When rain fell down we took a break going drinking in the pubs Our only shoes went worn out, our bones suffered the damp Day by day we threw away the clothes pack'd in a bodhran bag From County Clare to Sligo Bay we played almost everywhere With singers, pipers, fiddlers we met along the way We sat down in the Burren where horses graze beside the sea I closed my eyes and then we sang a few songs to the wind I woke up in my bed with a painful headache I could no longer hear the whisper of the wind A few childer were playing football out there in the street I suddenly realized alas that I was back home The walls looked at me as a stranger in their lands I felt a sense of loneliness, so far from shamrock shore She kept me hand and I tried to drive away the unhappiness But holding down the head a tear felt on me bed