The Ballad of Blue Point
(to the beat of an Irish drinking song)
At Blue Point Fair, in a village there
A young maiden anxiously looked at the sea
Combing her long locks, minding every tick of the clock
She awaited the return of dear lover Du Pre
When the clock struck nine, golden ribbons she entwined
Deeply into her dark satiny braids
Waiting yet still then as the clock struck ten
She caressed her dresses and sighed
The night pressed forward on, yet she waited til dawn
Pressing her bosom to the window pane
Yet returned he no more thou her broken sobs implored
He had been captured by the free life of the sea
He had loved her dear when he had held her near
And had murmured “Surely I must love thee”
But now from afar, other ladies, taverns and bars
Had devalued love’s tingle severely
By early next spring, another suitor, and a ring
Did present themselves to this lady so fair
She wed the next year, and shed not a tear
They raised four pretty daughters with glee
And the sailor Du Pre, enjoyed his life set oh so free
Thou he had felt marriage a trap, he died of the clap
And they say he was buried at sea.