Johnny Mceldo

There was Johnny McEldoo and McGhee and me, and a

couple or two or three went on a spree one day

We had a bob or two which we knew how to blew, and the

beer and whiskey flew and we all felt gay

We visited McCann's, McIllmann's, Humpty Dan's, we then

went in to Swann's our stomachs for to pack

We ordered out a feed which indeed we did need, and we

finished it with speed but we still felt slack

Johnny McEldoo turned red, white and blue when a plate

of Irish stew he soon put out of sight

He shouted out "Encore" with a roar for some more, that

he never felt before such a keen appetite

He ordered eggs and ham, bread and jam, what a cram!

But him we couldn't ram though we tried our level best

For everything we brought, cold or hot, mattered not,

it went down him like a shot, but he still stood the

test

He swallowed tripe and lard by the yard, we got scared,

we thought it would go hard when the waiter brought the

bill

We told him to give o'er, but he swore he could lower

twice as much again and more before he had his fill

He nearly supped a trough full of broth says McGrath,

"He'll devour the tablecloth if you don't hold him in"

When the waiter brought the charge, McEldoo felt so

large, he began to scowl and barge and his blood went

on fire

He began to curse and swear, tear his hair in despair,

and to finish the affair called the shopman a liar

The shopman he drew out, and no doubt, he did clout,

McEldoo he kicked about like an old football

He tattered all his clothes, broke his nose, I suppose

he'd have killed him with a few blows in no time at all

McEldoo began to howl and to growl, by my sowl, he

threw an empty bowl at the shopkeepers head

It struck poor Mickey Flynn, peeled the skin off his

chin and the ructions did begin and we all fought and

bled

The peelers did arrive, man alive, four or five, at us

they made a drive for us all to march away

We paid for all the mate, that we ate, stood a trate,

and went home to reminate on the spree that day