The Irish Jaunting Car
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''The Irish Jaunting Car'' is a folk song associated with the
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and
Ireland Ireland ( ; ga, Éire ; Ulster Scots dialect, Ulster-Scots: ) is an island in the Atlantic Ocean, North Atlantic Ocean, in Northwestern Europe, north-western Europe. It is separated from Great Britain to its east by the North Channel (Grea ...
. The words were reportedly written by the entertainer Valentine Vousden in the late 1850s, shortly after
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's visit to Ireland, and events of the
Crimean War The Crimean War, , was fought from October 1853 to February 1856 between Russia and an ultimately victorious alliance of the Ottoman Empire, France, the United Kingdom and Piedmont-Sardinia. Geopolitical causes of the war included the de ...
. The original words to the song are widely debated and disputed. Percy French wrote his own version of the song 'The Irish Jaunting Car' for his highly successful comic opera The Knight of the Road. Bernadette Lowry in her book (Dec 2021) 'Sounds of Manymirth on the Night's Ear Ringing: Percy French (1854-1920) His Jarvey Years and Joyce's Haunted Inkbottle' discovered that the reference 'he might be a Volunteer Vousdem' in James Joyce 's Finnegans Wake is a reference to Percy French and this opera by French which Joyce knew well. Lowry found reams of French's material including from his comic paper The Jarvey in Joyce's final novel. Crucially, she discovered the reference to the death of French in Liverpool on page 73-74 of Finnegans Wake. French's comic weekly magazine called The Jarvey from January 1889 -January 1891 is based on the ramblings of a jarvey on an Irish Jaunting car. Lowry traced reams from the magazine in Finnegans Wake. Her scholarship marks the first serious exploration of The Jarvey comic journal. The original tune of The Irish Jaunting Car was later used by several other writers as a setting for their patriotic lyrics, particularly among the Irish diaspora in the
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. These included the 1861 marching song ''
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'' by Irish born entertainer
Harry McCarthy Harry McCarthy (1834–1888), also known as Harry Macarthy, was a songwriter from Ireland, where he became a variety entertainer and comedian in the mid 19th century. Career In 1861 he wrote the song "The Bonnie Blue Flag," about the unoffi ...
, and ''The Homespun Dress'' by Carrie Belle Sinclair, a volunteer nurse from
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. Further variants such as "''The Irish Volunteer''" continue to use the original tune.


Complete lyrics

This variant of the lyrics appear in ''The Universal Irish Song Book: A Complete Collection of the Songs and Ballads of Ireland'' published in 1898 by Patrick John Kenedy. Numerous references to the current geopolitical situation at the time can be observed. 1 My name is Larry Doolan, I'm a native of the soil, If you want a day's diversion, I'll drive you out in style, My car is painted red and green, and on the door a star, And the pride of
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City is my Irish jaunting car. Chorus ''Then if you want to hire me, step into Mickey Mar's,'' ''And ask for Larry Doolan and his Irish jaunting car.'' ''With me whip and pipe and pony, I'll take you near and far'' ''To fairs, feasts, and festivals in me Irish jaunting car'' 2 When
Queen Victoria Victoria (Alexandrina Victoria; 24 May 1819 – 22 January 1901) was Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 20 June 1837 until Death and state funeral of Queen Victoria, her death in 1901. Her reign of 63 years and 21 ...
came to Ireland her health to revive, She asked the
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to take her out to ride, She replied unto his greatness, before they travelled far, How delightful was the jogging of the Irish jaunting car. Chorus 3 I'm hired by drunken men, teetotalers, and my friends, But a carman has so much to do, his duty never ends, Night and day, both wet and dry, I travelled near and far, And at night I count the earnings of my Irish jaunting car. Chorus 4 Some say the Russian bear is tough, and I believe it's true, Though we beat him at the
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and Balaklava too, But if our Connaught Rangers would bring home the
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, I would drive him off to blazes in my Irish jaunting car. 5 Some say all wars are over, and I hope to God they are, For you know full well they ne'er were good for a jaunting car, But peace and plenty - may they reign here, both near and far, Then we drive to feasts and festivals in an Irish jaunting car. Chorus 6 They say they are in want of men, the French and English too, And it's all about their commerce now they don't know what to do, But if they come to Ireland our jolly sons to mar, I'll drive them to the devil in my Irish jaunting car. Chorus


Recordings

* Sung by J. B. Smith, a Celebrated Irish Vocalist * 17, Great Irish Marches, 1st Battalion Irish Guards 2002 * 1, No Irish Need Apply, Gallant Sons of Erin 2003 * 5, The Irish Jaunting Car, Ho! For The Kansas Plains, The Free Staters 2004 * 2, Last Man Standing, Derek Warfield & the Young Wolfe Tones 2018


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Irish Jaunting Car, The 1850s songs Irish songs Crimean War