Ewan MacColl
Ewan MacColl - The Flying Cloud lyrics
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My name is Arthur Hollandin, as you may understand I was born ten miles from Dublin Town, down on the salt-sea strand When I was young and' comely, sure, good fortune on me shone My parents loved me tenderly for I was their only son My father he rose up one day and with him I did go He bound me as a butcher's boy to Pearson of Wicklow 1 wore the bloody apron there for three long years and more 'Til I shipped on board of The Ocean Queen belonging to Tramore It was on Bermuda's island that I met with Captain Moore The Captain of The Flying Cloud, the pride of Baltimore I undertook to ship with him on a slaving voyage to go To the burning shores of Africa, where the sugar cane does grow It all went well until the day we reached old Africa's shore And five hundred of them poor slaves, me boys, from their native land we bore Each man was loaded down with chains as we made them walk below Just eighteen inches of space was all that each man had to show The plague it came and fever too and killed them off like flies We dumped their bodies on the deck and hove them overside For sure, the dead were the lucky ones for they'd have to weep no more Nor drag the chain and feel the lash in slavery for evermore But now our money it is all spent, we must go to sea once more And all but five remained to listen to the words of Captain Moore 'There's gold and silver to be had if with me you'll remain Let's hoist the pirate flag aloft and sweep the Spanish Main" The Flying Cloud was a Yankee ship, five hundred tons or more She could outsail any clipper ship hailing out of Baltimore With her canvas white as the driven snow and on it there's no specks And forty men and fourteen guns she carried below her decks We plundered many a gallant ship down on the Spanish Main Killed many a man and left his wife and children to remain To none we showed no kindness but gave them watery graves For the saying of our captain was: "Dead men tell no tales." We ran and fought with many a ship, both frigates and liners too Till, at last, a British Man-O-War, The Dunmow, hove in view She fired a shot across our bows as we ran before the wind And a chainshot cut our mainmast down and we fell far behind They beat our crew to quarters as they drew up alongside And soon across our quarter-deck there ran a crimson tide We fought until they killed our captain and twenty of our men Then a bombshell set our ship on fire, we had to surrender then It's now to Newgate we have come, bound down with iron chains For the sinking and the plundering of ships on the Spanish Main The judge he has condemned us and we are condemned to die Young men a warning by me take and shun all piracy Farewell to Dublin City. and the girl that I adore I'll never kiss your cheek again nor hold your hand no more Whiskey and bad company have made a wretch of me Young men, a warning by me take and shun all piracy