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OED’s citation from 1841: "boreen, bohreen, bohereen, bohir- (Anglo-Irish): A lane, a narrow road; also used to denote an opening in a crowd."
"Star of the County Down" is an Irish ballad set near Banbridge in County Down, Ireland. The words are by Cathal MacGarvey (1866–1927) from Ramelton, County Donegal. MacGarvey's song was first collected in Herbert Hughes Irish Country Songs. The tune is traditional, and may be known as "Dives and Lazarus" or (as a hymn tune) "Kingsfold". -wikipedia
The attribution cites "O'Lochlainn, Colm (1967). Songwriters of Ireland in the English Tongue". Dublin: Three Candles Press.
"Star of the County Down" is an Irish ballad set near Banbridge in County Down, Ireland. The words are by Cathal MacGarvey (1866–1927) from Ramelton, County Donegal. MacGarvey's song was first collected in Herbert Hughes Irish Country Songs. The tune is traditional, and may be known as "Dives and Lazarus" or (as a hymn tune) "Kingsfold". -wikipedia
The attribution cites "O'Lochlainn, Colm (1967). Songwriters of Ireland in the English Tongue". Dublin: Three Candles Press.
Star of the County Down
by Cathal MacGarvey
Near Banbridge town in the County Down
one morning in Ju- ly
Down a boreen green came sweet col- leen
and she smiled as she passed me by.
She looked so sweet from her two bare feet
to the sheen of her nut brown hair.
Such a coaxing elf that I shook my- self
to make sure she was really there.
(Chorus
From Bantry Bay up to Derry Quay
and from Galway to Dublin town
no maid I’ve seen like the sweet col- leen
that I met in the County Down )
As she onward sped I shook my head
and I gazed with a feeling quare,
‘And I said’ says I to a passer by
‘Who’s the maid with the nut-brown hair?’
He smiled at me and with pride says he
‘That’s the gem of Ireland’s crown.
She’s young Rosie McCann from the banks of the Bann,
She’s the Star of the County Down’.
Chorus
She’d a soft brown eye and a look so sly
And a smile like the rose in June
And you hung on each note from her lily-white throat
as she lilted an Irish tune.
At the pattern dance you were held in a trance
as she tripped through a jig or a reel
and when her eyes she’d roll, she would lift your soul,
and your heart she would quickly steal.
Chorus
one morning in Ju- ly
Down a boreen green came sweet col- leen
and she smiled as she passed me by.
She looked so sweet from her two bare feet
to the sheen of her nut brown hair.
Such a coaxing elf that I shook my- self
to make sure she was really there.
(Chorus
From Bantry Bay up to Derry Quay
and from Galway to Dublin town
no maid I’ve seen like the sweet col- leen
that I met in the County Down )
As she onward sped I shook my head
and I gazed with a feeling quare,
‘And I said’ says I to a passer by
‘Who’s the maid with the nut-brown hair?’
He smiled at me and with pride says he
‘That’s the gem of Ireland’s crown.
She’s young Rosie McCann from the banks of the Bann,
She’s the Star of the County Down’.
Chorus
She’d a soft brown eye and a look so sly
And a smile like the rose in June
And you hung on each note from her lily-white throat
as she lilted an Irish tune.
At the pattern dance you were held in a trance
as she tripped through a jig or a reel
and when her eyes she’d roll, she would lift your soul,
and your heart she would quickly steal.
Chorus